Southern recorder. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1820-1872, July 18, 1820, Image 4
FKUM THE rKN or THOMAS *001*.
Tto.toy.«vM r r r h r janlhr«».ny d oy*,
The utftaw"JewmiW.«n.lazurearch'd sby
Tl,e 7.™^ "^;';;^.’motion,
Worn Km distant hill, till .he li«l,t-hou« (Ire
Like «star > n the midst of the ocean.
Nn Innrrrthe ipy of sailor hoy s breast
' lVasLanlb. the wildly breatl.M .mmbers,
the seabird bad flown to her war e pi died nest,
The fisherman sunk to his sbimoeis .
One moment I look'd from the hill a gcr dope,
Ml hush’d w as the billow » cormiioliui.
And (ho t that the light house look d low ly «»
That smr’of life's tremulous ocean.
The lime is long past, the scene is afar,
Vet when mv head rests on its pub" •
Will memory sometimes rekindle tnesini
Thill War’don the breast of the billow
In life's closing hour, when the trembling soul
flies. ,
Ami death stills the heart s hist emotion ,
O then may the seraph of merry arise,
Like a slar on eternity's ocean.
FROM THL WiTfllllAN.
. PIRACY.
Scarce doth a star, or lunar beam,
Cast on the w nve a transient light'
But through the clouds a fitful gleam
Just shows the gloominess of night.
Yet Innocence and Beauty dwell
Beneath yon deck, in soft repose;
Cradled by Ocean’s gentle swell ;
Fartn d by the breeze that mildly blows.
One svcil might hope, in such a scene,
The Passions toot might calmly rest;
But e'en wheil Ocean is serene,
Storms rage within the human breast.
What forms demoniac leave her side,
Like outlaw s from the dusky den r
Like Imps they hurry o’er the tide ;
Miume on my race! These Imps are Men
riunder began and Murder ends
This tragedy, this hellish deed!
Downward the scuttled vessel tends,
And none the shrieking victims heed !
N# human ear regardstliat cry !
No breast reciprocates that sigh !
But callous hearts repel the sound ;
As echoes from the rocks rebound
But Ilenveu is just, ami in due time
Will bring to light these sons of crime ;
Then vindicate, 0 man thy race ;
Then .11 stick shew thy sternest face
If one to mercy shall incline,
limit (ioci, that mercy must he thine ;
Thine for their Souls—while they atone
To mini, for deeds of horror done. O.
rnoM THE SKKTUl BOOK
RURAL LIFE IN ENGLAND.
fill' friendly to the best pursuits of man,
friendly to thought, to virtue, and to peuce,
Domestic life in rural pleasure pass'd !
CoWPER.
The stranger who would form it cor
reel opinion of the English character,
must not confine his observations to the
metropolis. He must go forth into the
country ; he must sojourn in villages and
hamlets; he must visit castles, villas,
farm houses, cottages ; he must wander
through parks and gardens; along hedg
es and green lanes ; he must loiter about
country churches ; attend wakes and
fairs, and oilier rural festivals ; mingle
with the people of all ranks nnd conditi
ons, and become familiar with the habits
and humors incident to each.
In some cpnntries, the large cities ab
sorb the wealth & fashion of the nation ;
they are the only fixed abodes of elegant
and intelligent society, and the country
is inhabited ulinost entirely by boorish
peasantry. In England, on the contra
ry, the metropolis is a mere gathering
place, or general rendezvous, of the po
lite circles, where they devote a«small
portion of the year to a hurry of gayetv
and dissipation, and having enjoyed this
kind of carnival, return again to the ap
parently more congenial habits of rural
life. The various strata of society,
therefore, are diffused over the whole
surface of the kingdom,-and the most re
tired neighborhoods afford specimens of
the different ranks.
The English, in fact, are strongly gif
ted with the rural feeling. They pos
sess a keen sensibility to the beauties of
aature, and a relish for the pleasures
aDd employments of the country. This
passion seems inherent with them. Even
the inhabitants of cities, born &. brought
up among brick walls it bustling streets,
enter with facility into rural habits, and
evince a tact for rural occupation. The
merchant has his snug retreat in the vi
cinity of the metropolis, where he often
displays as much pride and zeal in the
cultivation of his flower garden, and the
maturing of his fruits, as he does in the
conduct of his business, and the success
of a commercial operation. Even those
less fortunate individuals, who are doom
ed to pass their lives in the midst of din
and traffic, contrive to have something
that shall remind them of the green as
pect of nature. In the dark and dingy
lanes of the metropolis, every drawing
room window is like a bank of flowers 1 ;
wherever, also, there is a spot capable
of vegetation, the grass plot and flower
bed are cultivated, and every square has
its mimic park, laid out with picturesque
taste, and gleaming with refreshing ver
dure.
Those who see the Englishman only
in town, are apt to form an unfa mrable
opinion of his social character. He is
either absorbed in business, or distract
ed by the thousand engagements that
dissipate time, thought, “and feeling, in
this huge metropolis. He has, there
fore, too commonly, a look of hurry and
abstraction. Wherever lie happens trf
be, he is on the point of going some
where else ; at the moment he is talk
ing on one subject, his mind is wander
ing to another; and while paving a
friendly visit, is calculating how he shall
economize time so as to pay the othervi-
-eits allotted to the morning. An im
mense metropolis like London, is calcu
lated to make men selfish and uninterest
ing. In their carnal and transient meet
ings, they can but deal briefly in com
mon places. They present but the cold
upertic es of character—its rich and ge
nial qualities have no tune to he wa.mcd
into a flow.
Hut it is in the country that the En
glishman gives scope to his natural feel
ings. He breaks loose gladly from the
cold formalities and negative civilities of
town; throws otf his habits of shy re
serve, and becomes joyous k. free-heart
ed. He contrives to draw around him
all the conveniences and elegancies of
oolite life, mid to banish its restraints.
Ilis country seat abounds with every re
quisite, either for studious retirement,
Itistcfnl gratification, or rural exercise.
Hooks, paintings, music, horses, dogs, k
sporting implements of all kinds, tire at
hand. He puts no constraint, cither up
on Ills guests or himself, but in the true
spirit of hospitality, provides the means
of enjoyment, and leaves every one to
partake according to his iuclinatioin.
The taste of the English in the culti
vation of land, and in what is termed
landscape gardening, is unrivalled. They
have studied nature intently, and disco
ver an exquisite sense of her beautiful
forms anil harmouius combinations.—
Those charms, which, in other coun
tries, she lavishes in wild solitudes, are
here assembled round the haunts of do
mestic life. They seem to have caught
her coy and furtive graces, nnd sprem
them, like witchery, about their rural
abodes.
Nothing can be more imposing tli
the magnificence of English park scene
ry. Vast lawns that extend like sheets
of vivid • green, with here and there
clumps of gigantic trees, heaping up
rich piles offoliage. The solemn pomp
of groves, and woodland glades, with the
deer trooping in silent herds across
them ; the hare, bounding away to •■the
covert; or the pheasant, suddenly burst
ing upon the wing. The brook, taught
to wind in the most natural meandering*,
or expand into u glassy lake —the seques
tered pool, reflecting the quivering
trees, with the yellow leaf sleeping on
its bosom, the trout roaming fearlessly
about its limpid waters ; while some rus
tic temple, or statue of nymph,* grown
green and dank with age, gives nn ait' of
classic sanctity to the seclusion.
These are a few of the features of
park scenery, which, indeed, is too well
known to need description. But what
most delights me, is the creative talent
with which the English decorate the un
ostentatious abodes of middle life. The
rudest habitation, the most unpromising
and scanty portion of land, in the hands
of an Englishman of taste, becomes a lit
tle paradise. With a nicely discrimina
ting eye, lie seizes tit once upon its ca
pabilities, and pictures in his mind the
future landscape. The steril spot grows
into loveliness under his hand ; and yet
the operations of art produce the effect
are scarcely to be perceived. The
cherishing and training of some trees ;
the caiHious pruning of others ; the de
licate distribution of flowers and plants
of tender and graceful foliage ; the in
troduction ftf a green slope of velvet
turf; the partial opening to a peep of
blue distance, or silver gleam of water—
all these are managed with a nice tact, a
pervading, yet quiet assiduity, like the
magic touchings with which a painter fi
nishes up a favorite picture.
The residence of people of fortune
and refinement in the country has dif
fused a degree of taste and elegance in
rural economy that descends to the low
est class. The very labourer, with his
thatched cottage k narrow slip of ground,
attends to their embellishment. The
trim hedge, the grass plot before the door,
the little flower lied borddred with snug
box, the woodbine trained up against the
wall, and hanging its blossoms about the
lattice ; the pot of flowers in the win
dow ; the holly providently planted a-
bout the house, to cheat wiyter of its
dreariness, and throw in a look of green
summer to cheer the fireside :—all these
bespeak the influence of taste, flowin
down from high sources, and pervading
the lowest levels of the public mind.—
If ever love, as poets sing, delights to vi
sit a cottage, it must be the cottage of an
English peasant.
The proncncss to rural life among the
higher classes of the English, has had a
great and salutary effect upon the nation
al character. I do not know a finer race
of men than the English gentlemen. In
stead of the softness and effeminacy
which characterize the men of rank in
some countries, they exhibit a union of
elegance and strength, a robustness of
frame and freshness of complexion,
which I am inclined to attribute to their
living so much in the open air, and pur
suing so eagerly the invigorating recrea
tions of the country. These hardy ex
ercises also produce a healthful tone of
mind and spirits, and a manliness and
simplicity of manners, which not even
the follies and dissipations of the town
can easily pervert, or ever entirely de
stroy. In the country, too, the differ
ent orders of society seem to approach
more freely, to be more disposed to
blend and operate favourably upon each
other. The distinctions between them
do not appeal to be so marked and im
passable as in the cities. The manner
in which property has been distributed
into small estates and farms, has estab
lished a regular gradation from the no
bleman, through the classes of gentry,
small landed, proprietors' substantial far
mers, down to the labouring peasantry ;
and w hile it has thus bound the extremes
of society together, has implanted in
each intermediate-rank a spirit of inde
pendence. This, it must be confessed,
is not so universally the case at present
as it was formerly ; the larger estates
having, in late years of distress, absorbed
the smaller, and. in some parts of the
country, almost annihilated the sturdy
race of small farmers. These, howev
er, I believe, are but casual breaks in
the general system l have mentioned.
In rural occupation there is nothing
mean and debussmg. It lead- a .man toriti
among scenes of natural grandeur and
beauty ; it leaves him to the Workings
of liis own mind, operated upon by the
purest and ino«t elevating of external in
fluences. Such a man may be simple
nnd rough, but lie cannot be vulgar.—
The man of refinement, therefore, finds
nothing revolting in an intercourse with
the loner orders in rural li!e,as he does
when casually mingling with the lower
orders of ctlies. lie lays aside liis dis
tance and reserve, and is glad to doll the
badges and wave the privileges of rank,
and enti r into the honest heartfelt en
joyments of common life. Indeed, the.
very amusements of the country bring
men more and more together ; and the
sound of hound and horn blend all feel
ings into harmony, i believe this is one
great reason why the nobility and gentry
are more populat among the inferior or
ders in England than they are in any 0-
ther country ; and why the latter have
endured so many excessive pressures
and extremities, without repining more
generally at the unequal distribution of
fortune end privilege.
i 0 this mingling of cultivated and
rustic society, also, may be attribnted
ilie rural feeling that runs through Uri-
tisb literature ; tb 'frequent use of illus
trations from rural life | those incompa
rable descriptions of nature, that abound
in the British poets—that have continu
ed down from “ the tlower and the leaf'’
of Chaucer, and have brought into our
closets all the freshness and fragrance ol
the dewy landscape. The pastoral wri
ters of oilier countries appear as if they
had.paid nature tin occasional visit, and
become acquainted with her general
charm- ; but tluvLiriiish poets have liv
ed and revelled nitli her—they have
wooed her in her most secret haunts
—‘they h ive watched her minutest ca
prices. A spray could not tremble in the
breeze—a leaf could not rustle to the
ground—a diamond drop could not put
ter in the stream—a fragrance could not
exhale from the humble violet, nor a dai
sy unfold its crimson tints to the inom-
riing, but it has been noticed by these
impassioned and delicate observers, and
wrought up into some beautiful morali
ty- ,
The effect of this devotion of elegant
minds to rural occupations has been
wonderful on the face of the country.
A great part of the island is level, and
would be monotonous, were it not fu
tile charms of culture ; but it is studded
and gemmed, as it were, with castles and
palaces, and embroidered with parks and
gardens. It does not abound in grand
and sublime prospects, but rather in lit
tle home scenes of rural repose and
sheltered quiet. Every antique farm
house tind moss-grown cottage is a pic
ture ; and as the roads are continually
winding, and the view shut in by groves
and hedges, the eye is delighted by a
continual succession of small landscapes
of captivating loveliness-
The great charm, however, of Eng
lish scenery is the moral feeling that
seems to pervade it. It is associated in
the miml with ideas of order, of quiet,
of sound and steady principles, of hoary
usage nnd reverend custom. Every
tiling seems to be the growth of ages of
regular and peaceful existence. The old
church of remote architecture, with-its
low massive portal —its gothic tower—its
windows rich with tracery, ami painted
.Vuc-./< i.tsty.— Daring the session of the
Legislature of NVav-Jersey, which has just
terminated, many petitions were presented,
representing the pecuniary embarrassments
■ UOUUt , -
were velem-d to a committee, who maw an
elaborate report upon the subject. The
committee say, that “ two projects only have
been agitated here, or, perhaps, thought of
elsewhere—First, that the stale shall loan a
competent sum of money to such persons as
ate ia need of jt, upon aulficieiit seeurity for
its repayment at a proper period of credit.
Manv objections present themselves nt. one-
of the community, and praying relief, by a
loan of money from the state. The petitions
to this proposition. In the first place, the
STATE HAS VO MONEY TO I.EM).
Aycry powt-.rliil“objection,”indeed! And
Ay cry pout
here we think the committee might have,
ilopped snort, without going into detail, or
canvassing the other objections.
It is said that when Louis XIV. was once
making the tour of his kingdom, on arriving
at a certain town, the customary royal salute
was not fired. The chief officer of the town
went to His Majesty, for the purpose of apo
logising for the apparent neglect. He com
menced by stating that lx- hud more than
forty excuses to oiler, the first of which was,
“ That they had no Cannon.” Being about
to proceed with the others, His Majesty cut
the matter short, by saying that lie would
very readily dispose with the remaining
thirty-nine.—,V. 1’. Spectator
glass in scrupulo
serration—its
stately monuments of warriors and wor
thies of the olden time, ancestors of the
present lords of the soil—its tombstones,
recording successive generations of stur
dy yeomanry, whose progeny Still plough
the same fields, and kneel at the same al
tar ;—the parsonage, a quaint irregular
pile, partly antiqnntcd, but repaired and
altered in the tastes of various ages and
occupants ;—the stile ar.d footpath lead
ing from the churchyard, across pleas
ant fields, aud along shady hedge-rows,
according to an immemorial right of « ay ;
—the neighbouring village, with its ven
erable cottages, its public green, shel
tered by trees, under which the forefa
thers of the present race have sported ;
—the antique family mansion, standing
apart in some little rural domain, but
looking down with a protecting air on
the surrounding scene :—All these com
mon features of English landscape, evince
a calm and settled security, an heredita
ry transmission of home-bred virtues,
and local attachments, that speak deeply
and touchingly for the moral character
of the nation.
It is a pleasing sight of a Sunday mor
ning, when the hell is sending its sober
melody across the quiet fields, to behold
the peasantry in their best finery, with
ruddy faces, and modest cheerfulness, -
thronging tranquilly along the green
lanes to church ; but it is still more plea
sing to sec them in the evenings, gather
ing about their cottage doors, and ap
pearing to exult in the humble comforts
and embellishments which their own
hands have spread around them.
It is this s-wcct home feeling, this set
tled repose of affection in the domestic
scene, which is, after all, the parent of
the steadiest virtues and purest enjoy
ments ; and I cannot close these desul
tory remarks better, than by q« >ting the
words of a modern English poet, who lias
depreted it with remarkable felicity :
Through each gradation, from the castled hall,
The city dome,the villa crown'd with shade,
But chief from modest mansions numberless,
In town or hamlet, she.lt ring middle life,
Down to the cottng'd vale, k struw-roof’d shed,
This western isle hath longbeenfajnedfnrscenes
Where bliss domestic finds a dwelling place ;
Domestic bliss, that, like n harmless dove,
(Honour and sweet endearment keeping guard,)
Can centre in a little quiet nest
All thut desire would fiy for through the earth ;
That enn, the world eluding, be itself
A world enjoy'd; that wants no witnesses
But its own sharers, and approving heaven.
That, like a flower deep hid in rocky cleft,
'milts, though 'tis looking only at the sky.
BREACH OF PROMISE OF MARRIAGE
New Brunswick, (N. J.) Juno 22.
At the sitting of the Circuit Court in
this city last week, Mr. Hartwell, a gen
tleman of the bar, in the adjoining coun
tv of Somerset, wits arraigned on a charge
of breach of promise of marriage to Miss
Edgar, of Short Hills, in this count).—
After a patient and interesting investiga
tion of two days, the cause was submitt
ed to the jury, who, after tin absence
of two hours, returned vNitli a verdict
lor the plaintiff of twelve hundred andjifth
dollars damages ! A verdict equally hon
orable lo their feelings as lathers, and
1 heir integrity as citizens- Mr. Hartwell
is a man of small property we under
stand.
The great novelty and delicacy oftlii*
ease, attracted an unusual assemblage
and the Court House was crowded al
most to suffocation. The counsel on botl
sides managed with much skill and ad
dress ; but the counsel for the r hiintiff.
having the popular and right side of the
question, gratified the audience with a
display of honorable feeling, sarcastic
reproach, anil vibrating eloquence, sel
dom equalled. .Such a iaslt of censure,
to a man of the least sensibility, must
have been like the sting of scorpions
FROM THE PHILAlit.LPHIA gazette.
The following laughable scene., at
which l was present, took place a fe
days ago. It may perhaps amuse your
readers.
A largo Green Turtle was to he killed
at one of our principal hotels. Its uncom
mon size, nnd the manner of despatching
it attracted the attention of several of the
boarders. At the moment the black ex
ecutioner, was about to commence the
operation, and drawing the. keen carving
kniie across the throat of the suspended
animal—Lo ! at the moment the fatal
weapon was entering, the turtle, in a
most pitiful tone, cried out “ Mungo, why
dost thou kill tne ! let me live and happy
will be thy days.” The amazement of all
around kmost of all the affrighted Cook,
cannot be described, but such was the
effect that the knife was unconsciously
dropped, and Mungo ran off crying, it
was “ the Devil, and not a Turtle.”—
The scene was ludicrous in the extreme,
and required all (lie persuasion of those
present to convince the affrighted Cook,
it was only a humorous trick of Mr.
Charles the Ventriloquist, who stood and
occasioned all this sport.
Neiviii ltvi-oTiT, June JO.
A GOOD HAUL.
A lad by the name of Brookings, huntii
one day last week for an eel pot, sunk at the
upper side of Gfeenlenf’s wharf, fished a
small canvas hag containing five bars of pure
GOLD, weighing eighteen ounces, thi^value
of which is said to be something more than
SOI) dollars,,
Gentlemen who were on the stage of ac
tion during the American revolutionary war
account for its being lost, in the following
manner. A privateer schooner called the
Hatvk, commanded by the intrepid Jack Lee,
captured and sent, in, among many other pri
zes, an English brig hound from* Oporto lo
England, loaded with wine; she also bad on
board a large amount of dollars, as well as
gold, in bullion dust and coin.
It was not known by the captors, at the
time she was taken, that these precious me
tals were on board—the mate of the brig
(who remained in the prize) kept it from the
knowledge of the prize-inaster, hoping they
might be fallen in with and captured. She
however arrived safely, aud came to tile
wharf, now Greenleaf’s, where this gold was
found. It is conjectured that in attempting
to smuggle some of it ashore, it was either
accidentally dropped or designedly thrown
overboard to prevent detection—it is recol
lected that several seamen were imprisoned
for embezzling it.
The lad wr. understand has prudently de
termined to convert liis booty into cash,mini
deposit it in the Saving Bank.—Herald.
GIGS, SULKEYj k BLACKSMITH J OOL
JUST RECEIVED AND FOIt SA17K UY
WILEY h BAXTER,
2
1
1
which
paper.
J11I)
Very handsome Spring Gigs, with extra
fine Harness,
Elegant Snlhey, with superior Harness,
Smiths Bellows,
Anvils ; 12 Vices,
Casks Sledge and Hand Hammers.
AI.Su,
Cases gentlemens Beaver Hats,
Do. hoys Roram k Wool do.
Do. ladles Slaw Bonnets, very fine
will be sold low for cash or discountable
1, 1S20
21—Bt
EXECUTOR’S SALE.
P URSUANT to tin order of the honorable
the Inferior court of Baldwin county, when
sitting for ordinary purposes, will he soldou the
first Tuesday in September nest, at the court
house In Altunin county, a negro man liy the
name of Lunch, belonging to the estate of Ja’s
Neves, deceased, 'lerins made known on the
day of sale. WM. NEVES, ex'or.
Ja'yJ . m-tdt
EXECUTIVE DErjffr.lfEA'r, Gr.or.fltA, ?
Mili.eiiqevili.k, 8th July, 1820. \
npiIE Commissioners of the I,and Lottery be
ug convened at this place, for the purpose
of making the necessary preparations for the
same, having informed the Executive that they
will he In readiness to proceed to the Drawing
of said Lottery outlie 18th of August next:
NOTICE IS THEREFORE GIVEN,
in pursuance of the 1 6th section of the law of the
General Assembly of this State, dated 15th De-
ember, 1818, that the drawing of the .-aid Lot
tery w ill roniineucc nt the State-House on Fri-
luy, the 18th day of the ensuing month.
B1/ order of the Governor,
WILLIAM V. STEELE, Ste'ry.
The Editors of the Georgian nt Savannah,
the Augusta Chronicle, and the News at Wash
ington, (W ilkescounty) will give the above two
insertions in their respective papers.
July 11. 22—2t
NOTICE.
W ILLIAM II. CRENS1I \W, having joined
the firm of Bradford, HepImrn k Danelly.
as a joint and equal copartner, the business will
hereafter be conducted under the firm of
CRENSHAW, BRADFORD & Co.
by which firm tilt contracts made by Bradford,
Hepburn u Danelly, will lie settled.
William It. Crenshaw,
Bradford, Hepburn Danelly.
Milledgeviile, July I, 1820. 21 If
THE SUBSCRIBERS
H AVF. just received, and arc now opening—
Black k white heaver HATS, 1st quality,
Fashionable Straw Bonnets,
Gentlemen’s best calf skin Shoes,
Ladies’ Morocco Slippers aud Shoes,
Superior playing Curds,
Augusta mould Candles, firm and excellent,
Spcrinnccti Caudles,
Wrought and Cut Nails, assorted,
Train and Linseed Oil,
White Lend in oil anil kegs
Spanish Brown and Whiting,
Prussian Blue, Venetian Red,
New-Orleans indigo, Spanish Flotant do.
Putty, Brimstone, Glauber Salts,
Rotten Stone. Logwood, Dry Verdigris,
English Chalk, Opodeldoc, Glue,
Spirits Turpentine, Sand Paper,
Stoughton’s Bitters, Bitters in pint bottles,
Essence Peppermint,
Lees’ Pills, warranted genuine,
Macunhaw Snuil’, best Lucca Sailed Oil,
Olive Oil, in flasks, Cinnamon and Oil of do.
Ess Lemon, pure Lemon Acid,
Huny’s calcined Magnesia,
Sugar, Coffee, Molusses, Spirits,
Iron, Steel, Dupont s FEE Powder,
2(10 bushels Salt, a few coils best Rope,
\nd moo lbs. good Bacon—with theirformer
supply, render their assortment very general.
I hey wi-li to barter tor 1000yards Georgia
I lOMESPl’N, striped and white, tor which they
Will allow a liberal price.
JAM.LET k BUCHANON.
Milledgeviile, July lo. 22 3t
V entt un\ Vwyn, \V tivk.
2,000 pair of SHOES on hand, of all quali
ties ;
200,000 feet of Plunk and Seautling, at j? 1 50
per hundred ;
A quantity of low- post Bedsteads, nicely turn
ed, nt $3
High posted ditto, from ti to 10
Tables, from 2 to 10
Windsor Chairs, per dozen, lti to 20
Curt Wheels, ironed oil', fit for use, 28
Wagons nnd other similar work,
' equally ns cheap;
40U Cast-Steel Axes, at 2 50
Common ditto, 2 00
Alt Other Plantation Tools, ami Chains of eve
ry description very low priced.
Spinning Wheels and Water Vessels ns cheap
as they over could he bought.
IT / T.llUlltl.'i H executed with dispatch, and
not exceeded by any in the statu for neatness,
in the newest fashion.
Broad Cioth Coats made for £5 00
Pantaloons of the same, or Cussi-
mere, 1 f,o
Summer Coats, ;t on
All oilier work in (lmt line, equally cheap.
The public are respectfully invited to call nnd
fuHitsli themselves tvilli imy of our Manufac
tures, us it will he to their interest, nnd furllie
prosperity ol this valuable and humane Insti
tution 8
Cash w ill lie given for all the Coal k Tallow
that shall be delivered in the i’e 11 ilefitiary
l M’CARTY, r. K . P .
JuncO 17
THE SUBSCRIBERS
n-WE J VST RECEIVED DARIEN, A VERY EX
TENSIVE JUPPLY CC c;.M:«AL ASaoRTilLNT OF
ttlURiEAU&S*,
Which they offer by wholesale or retail on
corumodatiiig terms for cadi or good banka
ble paper at sixty or ninly days—consisting of
the follotvingnrticlcs :
8 hhds.vRye Wvskey;
ho bis. do do.
12 pipes Northern Gin;
d<) his. ditto;
7 do. Peppermint Cordial;
3 do. Aniseed do.
2 do. Shrub—6qr. cusks Malaga Wine;
2 qr. casks Tcneriffe Wine;
2 pipes old Madeira do.
12 dozen do. do.
6 do. Port do.
2 casks London Porter —1 do. do. Ale;
5 Ills. Cider—4 boxes do.
1 pipe Cognac Brandy-;
2t> Ills. Cherry Bounce;
4 do. Northern Run)—-1 lihtl do. do
2 lilids. Jamaica Hum—15 do. Molusses;
611 his. prime Brotvn Sugar;
3 hhds, do. do.
3 Imxes Havana do.
10 bis. Loaf do.
3 do. Lump do.
2u lings Coffee—3LK do.
2 boxes young Hyson Ten;
3 cadies Imperial do.
JO Pine-apple Cheese;
2 dozen boxes Raisins—7boxesSonp;
3 boxes Candles;
8 kegs Tobacco, (1st quality)
16 bis. Mackarel, No.3—26 do. do No. 2;
28 do. New-York Mess Pork;
18 do. do. prime do.
3 do. prime Beef;
5 tierces new Bice;
2 kegs wrought Nails, 8d. and 12d.
1 do. Cut do. Hd.
6,000 lhs. Swedes Jeon, assorted;
800 bushels Alum Suit—200 do. ground do.
ICT Those wishing to purchase will do well to
call, and particularly country merchants, at col
Lamar's new building, first door above Messrs.
tViLKYkBAXTKu, near the market.
E. W. BABKER k CO.
Milledgeviile, June 20. 20 tf
B Y an order of the honorable the Infpvior
Court, for the county of Baldwin, x v il| be
let at the court-house in the town of ri|iii„,i„,.
ville, on the first Monday in August next On-
building of a Room, with all RccJssary conC
niencies for the aocomn)e,dation of the Grand
Jury.i The terms of letting will be made known
Ji'lv o‘ y ' ns TH0MAS H KENAN
July 9 ' 2 - Clerk Inf Court.
J\ ine months alter date,
\ PPLICATION will be made to the In-
-TV fenor Court of Morgan county, when
sittmg lor ordinary pin-poses, for leave to sell
the Ileal Estate tuid Negroes efWm. Walkei
deceased SIMEON WALKER,
Administrator.
Nor. 30.
E—3m
WILL BE SOLD,
O N the first Tuesday ia August next, bftwcea
the usual hours of sale, at the Court-house
in the town of Dublin, Lauren's county, the fol
lowing PROPERTY, to wit:
One Bay Horse, Gig and Harness, Trunk, Vi
olin and Blnnknl—taking astho property of Mi
chael Va-ser, to satisly an execution in favor oC
Daniel Hill—property pointed out by the plain
tiff.
One Bay Mare and Bridle, as the property of
Stephen Low,to satisfy an execution In favor of
John M. B. Thompson—property pointed out
by the defendant.
One half of a Bout called Ann-Jackson, known
by Beaty's and Winltam's boat—to satisfy an ex
ecution in favor of Win. H. Puraniorc k others*
against said Beaty.
Also, one Negro Boy named Dick, about &
years old. and one Waggon—taken ns the pro
perty of Jacob Smith, to satisfy an execution iu
favorof George Jamison—property pointed out
by the defendant.
One House mid Lot in the town of Dublin, oa
Gnines-Streel, No. 22; one Bay Horae and Gig
and Harness; two Mahogany Tables, and one
large Looking-glass—levied on ns the property
Wright R. Coleman, one of the defendants,
Satisfy an execution in fuvor o*' John Tanner.
Terms, cash.
CHARLES S. GUYTON; Sheriff.
Dublin, June 17, 1820. 2u
Defatting Jurors Circuit Court, May Term, 182#
T HE following person* summoned to attend
the sixth Circuit Court of the United States
foe the District of Ucorgia, at Milledgeviile, in
the Term of May last, as Grand and Petit Jurors,
having made default: Ordered, that they be fined
unless good cause of excuse on oath be filed in
tlie Clerk's office on or before the 14th day of De
cember next: •
"'rand Jurors. Petit Jurors.
Joint A. Junes, William Bowen,
Thu's B. Rutherford, William C. Redding,
Williams Hutheford. Thompson Bird,
Ben). Williams.
Extract form the Minutes.
GEORGE GLEN, Cl’k.
June 26 21—4t
WILL BE SOLD,
O N Saturday, the lfith day of August next,
nt the late residence of Hugh Thomas, de-
eeased, all the personal Estate of the said Hugh
Thomus, consisting of household and kitchen
Furniture, Cattle and Hogs. kc.
NANCY THOMAS, Adm’rx.
ELI Vt HITDEN, Adm'r.
O’ Credit will be given until tho 1st of
March next, for small notes and good security.
July 3. 22
WILL BE SOLD,
O N Saturday, the 26th of Aug. at the late re
sidence of Maurice iMoorc, dec. in Bald
win county, the personal Property of said de
ceased, consisting of Horses, two young Mules,
a good yoke of O, in k Cart, Stock of all kinds
and other articles, unnecessary to mention
Terms of sale made known on the day.
B. B. MOORE, ,
MARY MOORE, l- iami)
July 11 22
RSU ANT to 1111 orderff the honorable the
Inferior Court of .Litres
Inferior Court of Joflfs county, wiil ho
sold, onlUESDAY, the 5th of September, nt
Clinton court-house, a valuable Negro WeucU
and child—part of the perisliuble estate of John
Critcher, deceased.—To be sold for the benefit
of tlie creditors ofsnid estate.
NATHANIEL W. GORDAN, Adm’r.
July 11. 22
C t EORfiiA, Baldwin county.
B Ezekiel Harris of captain Haws’district,
tolled before Gusti vus Hendrick, Esq. a Buy
Mure, about eleven years old, lour feet nine ami
a half inches high, no marks or brands—apprais
ed to seventy dollars, 26tli June, 182(1.
TllO’S H. KENAN, Cl’k.
July 4 21—3t
FOR SALE,
A '1'tlie Soda W ater Establishment, SOD1AC
POWDERS, POCKET LIGHTS, best
JAPAN BLACKING—also, Kich LEMON SYR-
UP, which will he sold by the bottle, or by th»
dozen or gallon, to suit families and taverns.
Milledgeviile, July 4
Cl*»l\8\uvw & RtWl'ONV
A HE compelled to inform persons iudebted
J-JL to them, that they will, without exception,
put iii suit tlie next court, ulUdebts due thim,
unless paid immediately. They will extend their
debts Rn- months for well endorsed paper, j-uyie-
ble at Bank. 18—tf June 13.
JAMES FINIGAN,
R ESPECTFULLY informs (lie inhabitant#
of Milledgeviile and its vicinity, that ho
carries on PAINTING in general, aud earnestly
solicits a share of tlie public patronage. All or
ders left at Appleton Rosseter’s Store, will bo
punctually attended to.
Milledgeviile, May 29 17—12t
GEO It GUI, Baldwin County, Superior Court,
April adjourned Term, 1820.
O N the petition of Elisha Whitney, stating
that lie holds n mortgage given by W illis
Perry (o him, conveying u lot of land lying and
being in tile town of Milledgeviile, containing
one huudred and fourteen feet fronting of Wash
ington street and two hundred and ten feet
fronting aud lying on Wilkinson street, adjoin
ing Fort on the east and Allen on the south;
said lot known and distinguished in the plan
ot said town by lot number three, in square
iiumbccr io.ty-three, to secure tlie payment of
eleven hundred and thirty dollars, on the first
day of March last, due 011 a prumisory note at
tached to said mortgage, and that said Willi*
Perry lias failed to pay said sum of money or a-
ny pari thereof: It is thereupon ordered, that
unless tlie said Willis Perry shall pay the amount
due on said mortgage with interest and cost in
to the Clerk's office of this court within twelve
months front this time, tlie equity of redemption
of, in and to said mortgaged premises, will he
thenceforth forever burred and foreclosed in
terms of the statute in such case made and pro
vided. And it is further ordered, that this rule
be published in one of tlie public Gazettes of
this state, once a month for the space of twelve
months, or served on the said Willis Perry or
liis special agent at least six mouths previous to
the time tlie money is directed to be paid.
1 certify tluit tlie foregoing is a true copy ta
ken from the minutes, this 24th of April, 1820.
THOMAS JL KENAN, Cl’k.
April 29 in 12m
C 4 EORGI \, Baldwin County.
James Thomas, administrator of Jonathan
Thomas, deceased, applies for letters r/f dismis
sion These are therefore to cite U nd singu-
ar the Imres and creditors of said deceased to
Me their objections in teriD so ftb e law in such
case made and provide^ (i f any they have,)
uli) said letters sho'.\,d not bo granted.
Given unu». r my band, this I61I1 April, 1820.
, _ THOMAS H. KENAN, Clerk.
Aptfl 18 10
Baldwin Superior Court, Jtpriladj'd. Term, 1820,
Present, the Hon. Ciuustopuzu B. Strong.
1’iiuoz Goldkn, i
vs. .• Libel for Divorce,
Mathew Golden. S
I T appearing to this court that the same has
not been served on the defendant—On mo
tion it is ordered, that service lie perfected tiv
publishing tins rule in one of the public gazette's
of this state : and it is further ordered, that the
same be entered 11s served as of tlie next term,
no good cause being shewn to the contrary,
and the same he published once a month for six
mouths.
A true extract taken from the minutes this
8th May, Iw20.
May i> THOS. H. KENAN, Clerk,
JOB-PRINTING
Of all kind, executed with neatness and dispatch
at Uic liuuoj/ku Oirtcu.
V*-