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.M\SVY\.L.LVT.
roR TilK nCCOIllIKR.
TO ARLF.Y.
Nay, nny ' *uch luw'ring clouds ns now
In Huger linger o'er thy brmv,
Would fright the little loves away,
E'en tlio’ they were inclin'd to stny •
But, in pood truth, my stubborn heart,
No wound line felt from Cupid's dart;
The rogueish boy from me ha* down,
To make some dearer prize his own.
From me lias flown, to 11 wing each hour,”
With one who owns his magic power J
Who oft in musing silence roves,
To seek Klysian Myrtle groves.
I envy—htr within whose breast,
The urchin finds a glowing nest!
Who holds him there in proud delight,
Confessing all the tyrant's might!
But y tv. must break these rosy toil*,—
Lot sunshine pour its golden smiles,
In radiant lu-tre o'erlliy face,
And ev'ry frowning care displace.
Nor favor Hope's delusive joys,
In sonnet writing—food for boys!
But think, (nor strivo my fate to move,)
I pity—tho' I cannot tin e. ROSA.
OUR LITERATURE.
It is amusinc; to sec the English prints
endeavoring to separate us in this coun
try from any share in the literary repu
tation of England—in the fame of her
hauls, heroes and scholars.
With what justice Ibis is done, let us
examine. At the commencement of the
revolution, these colonies formed an in
tegral part of the English empire. We
were English subjects : English history
was our history—English arts and let
ters were our letters and arts—English
arms, fortune, and fame, all were ours.
Whatever was once ours must remain
»o, unless we voluntarily surrender it,
or it has been taken away.
llow did the revolution affect our re
lative situation with the other side of the
Atlantic? Our connexion was social,
civil, literary, scientific, and political.
One of these, and only one of these ties
ever was, ever has been, ever can he
dissolved. Our political connexion with
England ceased. We protested against
it, and it was severed. Rut did we ever
protest against the Muses ? Did we ever
complain of the yoke of Letters? Did
no ever abjure allegiance to Genius ?—
Did we ever declare our independence
of Intellect ?—We protested against the
fllonarch, not against the Sage ; against
the Palace and the Tower, not against
Oxford and Westminster-Abbey ; against
Standing Armies, not against Flourishing
Arts.
Milton is ours. Shakspeare is ours.
Every thing English is and shall he ours
—except their political government and
their agricultural distresses.
The English language is ours, and all
that is in it, and we arc not to he cozen-
*>d out of it. We will not talk Ameri
can, nor Scotch, oor W'elch, but we will
talk in our own English language ; and,
enjoying the whole of the language, is it
not absurd to deny us a pari? Which ol
oor letters is not English—whit h of our
authors is not an English author ? Then
which English letter and which English
author is not ours ?
One peculiarity, indeed, we acknow
ledge, hut is not our fault. We cannot
leave out the /i in the word horse—nor
can we perceive it in the word cjf. Yet
politeness may bring ns to that, rather
than be barred of our inheritance. We
eetluinly might learn it of a beautiful la
dy—and these, by the way, are the best
instructors.
Our rights in the English literature
•and English arts cannot he taken from
tis, unless you cut out our tongues. It
is not a voyage acioss the Atlantic that
is to disinherit tis. Cceltrn non anirnum
mutant qui trans mare currant. It is
unfair and cruel to shut us out from all
the glories of antiquity, and give us only
forty years out of oblivion—and it shall
cot he done.
Wc will cling to the ancient fame of
England as Achilles did to the dead bo
dy of Patroclus. We will not cavil.it
is true, for Byron, who stains his soul
with *in, ami mingles blasphemy with
genius—nor for Campbell, lowly in his
loftiest Rights ; nor for Bloomfield, whose
muse tvus as humble as his occupation
nor Phillips, the rhetorical milliner of
artificial llowers—nor Southey, who
m ikes verses to all measures & to none-
nnr Wordsworth, the poet of the nur
sery—nor Crabbe, of the kitchen—nor
J.atly Morgan—nor Sir John Carr ; nor
will it kill us, iu this country, to he de
nied the Waverly novels, which arc kept
alive by continual multiplication, and no
doubt will last as tong as they are multi
plied. These we care not for ; and, al
though we have a right, vet will we not
complain of the licentiousness or Byron
.—the bombast of Philips—the milk anil
water of Wordsworth—the interstices of
Italian in Lady Morgan’s English, or the
interstices of Scotch in the Waverly no
vel*, which, by the way, is very much
n« if a gentleman should cut ditches it
his garden walk to try the agility of hi
company.
Rut in all the literary productions, in
all the triumphs and trnphips of art. in
all the scientific discoveries—in all the
glorious institutions of England, anterior
to the American Revolution, the peopl
of this country have a right, so far as a-
ny nr all of them confer national pr.ti«e
and honor, in common and in equality
with the natives of London, who never
^Walked out of its smoke.
[Charleston Courier.]
prom Tnr sew vnnx statfssian.
Miss M’CREA
" Litcmi** f ile !—the tide, vc nations,bear,
Eternal ages, tell it with a tear.''—BARLOW.
The remains of this Interesting and unliir
lunate young lady, w ho was massacred by
the Indians in the campaign of 1777, have
lately been disinterred by an association of
young gentlemen of Washington county,
and deposited in the church yard at Kurt
Edward, in the presence of a crowd of spec
tators. Her bones were found to bu little
decomposed, and the marks of the toma
hawk are Raid to have been still visible up
on her skull. Although the removal of her
ashes was undoubtedly intended as a mark
of respect, wo cannot Imt think it manifest
ed a want of taste. The spot where she
slept was romantic, sequestered, anil charm
ing, and its scenery harmonized with the
story of her misfortunes. It is thus derail)-
i d in Silliman’s Tour to Quebec :
“This beautiful spiiog, (where she fell)
which still flows liquid and cool, from a
hank near the road side, and this fatal tree
(to which she was lied) we saw.—The tree,
which is a large and ancient pine, “ fit for
the mast of some tall admiral,” is wounded
in many places by the hulls of the whiles
fired at the Indians ; they have been dug
out as far as they could he reached, hut oth
ers still remain in the ancient tree, which
seems a striking emblem of wounded inno
cence and the trunk twisted offal a consid
erable elevation by some violent wind, that
has left only a few mutilated branches, is a
happy, although a painful memorial of the
fate of Joiine M’Grea. Her name is inscrib
ed on the tree with date 17 77, and no travel
ler passes this spot, without spending a plain
tive moment in contemplating the untimely
fate of youth and loveliness.
Our readers will find the stnry well tnld
in the work, from which the above is tin ex
tract ; also in the sixth hook of the Colum-
liiad, and in Marshall’s Life of Washington.
At the suggestion of one of the city papers,
that the subject was susceptible of poetical
embellishment Fmirio has handed ns the
following beautiful lines, the last stanza of
which is an impromptu, written in a moment
to record with an idea expressed ill the lore-
going remarks.
Her lover is coming, her broom throbs high,
And love beams etichantingly bright in her eye,
This night she exclaims, bet ire heaven's pure
shrine,
My warrior youth is forever made mine—
Is that bis dear form, stealing slow thro' the
shade,
Is it thus he would come to his own bclov’d maid?
Oil no, Its the savage—death ties from his bow,
Anil life's current sullies her bosom of snow.
The night winds are upvvith the gathering storm,
They wave her dark tresses, they chill her soft
form ;
Cobl, cold is tier heart once so joyous and light,
Her eye of soft wildness no longer is bright.
The bridal bed’s ready, lint w here is the bride ?
The dealli drops have gathered and rolled from
her side,
The grave is tier bridal lied—gone isher bloom,
And her morning of brightness hath ended in
gloom,
Her lover is coming—he speeds on his way,
tie chides the dull moments of tedious delay,
Hope beats iu his brenst for that heavenly hour,
Uliicli gives him forever his heart's beloved
flower.
He reaches the spot; she is stretched on the bier;
No sigh rends hi* bosom, be sheds not a tear;
But dumb with deep anguish, lie hurries amain,
And lies on the battle-field ghastly and slain.
Let her rest where she fell, in hep beautiful
prime,
Ere the bloom of her cheek hnd been withered
by time—
By the clear-flowing spring, let her relinks
recline,
And her epitaph still be engraved on the pino.
l'LOUIO.
THE DEAF AND DUMB.
To enter this world without a wel
come—to leave it without an adieu—to
sutler and to, be unable to communicate
your suffering—to stand a sad and silent
monument atnid the joys of others, which
you cannot understand nor conceive of
—to be shut out of life—to carry within
your bosom the buried seeds of hap
piness which is never to grow, of intel
lect which is never to burst forth, of
usefulness which is never to germinate—
to find even your presence afflictive, and
not to know whether you excite compas
sion or horror—a whole existence with
out one cheering sound—without one
welcome accent—without one exhilira-
ting thought—without one idea of the
present—without one recollection of the
past—without one hope of the future.
Oh ! what a cloud of wretchedness co
vers, surrounds and overwhelms such a
Jeplorable victim of sorrow !
Now to throw over such a benighted
bring the sweet rays of intelligence—to
open the intellect, and let it gush forth
in streams of light and joy—to rouse the
affections that they may know anil love
God, the giver of all things, merciful
even in his chastisements—to enlighten
the soul, that it may see its origin and
its destiny—to cause the lips to smile,
Although they cannot spenk—the eye tn
glisten with other emotions than those
of sorrow—and the mind to understand,
although it cannot hear. Oh ! what a
beautiful supplement to the benevolence
of Heaven !—Charleston Courier.
A curious circumstance has occurred
in Great Britaiu, which reminds us of
the story of the Scotch Judge, who or
dered one half of the punishment direct
ed to he inflicted on a criminal “to he giv
en the King anil the other to the inform
er.” A law it appears was lately enact
ed in Parliament, which prohibits the
“ publishing any proposal or scheme lor
any Lottery excepting the State Lot'e-
ry,” under the penalty of “ fifty pounds
tor the first ollence, and being deemed
a rogue and vagabond and, for the
second tran«gre«sion, to he “ fined, im
prisoned, and publicly whipped.” Some
of the newspapers, unacquainted with
this regulation, published something
about a German Lottery, in consequence
of which the editors received notice
that they were to he prosecuted as “ va
gabonds under the act.” This has plac
ed them in a sad quandary, from which
it is not likely they w ill he able to es
cape with impunity. But Hie best of
the story is, the same advertisement ap
peared in his mj3t gracious majesty’s
Gazette, published at Edinburgh ; u
circumstance which appears to have ex
cited great sympathy for the royal per
son, as according to the Scotch Judge’s
interpretation of the law, tho King has
not ntdy incurred the penalty of titty
pounds, but may he “ deemed a rogue
and vagabond,” and, for might seen, he
imprisoned and whipped at the cart-tail.
For our part, we do not think there ex
ists any cause for these apprehensions,
because the King may as well he flag
ged hy proxy as married by prox ; anil
should none of his majesty’s ministers
feel disposed to take this upon them
selves, we think it would he no more
thifn just to^select a person to hear the
stripes from the office where the offence
was connnitteil.—.V. V’. Coin. Jldv.
Mistake of Pope.—We have always
thought Ports wrong, in saving.
An honest tmot'i the noblest work ortioil.”
For ourselves, we give a decided pre
ference to an honest woman ; women are
preferable in every thing.—Char. Cour.
IVincfc’s Mgcst
of TilF.
LAWS OY GYUIUiLl.
f |!IIK undersigned having contracted to print
1. for the State a certain number of copies,
now isanu
PROPOSALS,
FOK rURNlSIUNO TO THOSE WIIO MAT BECOME
SUBSCRIBERS,
DIGEST of the LA U S
OF THE
SUvte, «1l iir.Hvgvn,
C'ontainini' nil Statutes, and the substance of all
IDsululwns of ft general (nut public na'.dre, and
wav in force, which hare ba n passed in this
Stale previous to the Session oj the (mitral
Assembly of December, 18*20. W ith oc
casional explanatory notes and con
necting references, and a list of the
Slat alts repealed or obsolete.
TO WHICH IS AODKI),.LV AFl’FADIX,
Containing Hit Constitution of the Unit
ed Stales ; the Constitution of the
Slate of Georgia, as amended ;
the Statute of Frauds and
Perjuries, the Habeas
Corpus Act, ^c.^c.
WITH A COPIOUS INDEX.
Compiled by the appointment, and under the an•
thoity of the General Assembly,
By OLIVER H. PRINCE.
THF.RK nre few so ignorant ns not to know,
that a work like this, it even tolerably exeunt
edj must possess intrinsic value. The compila
lion of this hook is allowed by competent judg
es, to be performed in n very masterly man
ner; and the well known character of the gen-
tleinnn whose name it henrs, forbids the idea
of any deficiency of industry or talent, in exe
cuting the important service confided to him by
the Legislature.
It i3 believed that every man who c«n con
veniently buy this work ought to possess it, lie-
cause it behoves every citizen to have some
knowledge of the laws of his country. The o-
pinion expressed by Judge Blackslone is cer
tainly correct, that “ As every one is interest-
“ ed in the preservation of the Laws, it is in-
“ curnbent upon every man to he acquainted
“ with those at least, with which ho is immedi-
o ately concerned ; lest lie incur the censure,
“ as well as inconvenience, of living in socie-
“ tv, without knowing the obligations which it
“ lays him under.”
StnsvlfTa &y\\c.
W ILL 1»F SOLI), on the lint I’ticadny in
June next, at the Court house in Dub
lin, I.aureus county, the following property, to
wit :
Two lots in the town of Dublin, No 60, ly
ing on Jackson street; the, other, No. ‘23 on
Caines, taken in? the property of Fill wood and
Welch, to suti.-fy u !i fa in favor of Andrew Low
and others.
Also—One negro man named Toney, 85 or
*10 years of age, one negro woman named Sca
ly, 35 years of age, one girl named Susan, 11 or
1*2 years of age, one named Hetty, 7 or 8 yearn
of age, one boy named Jerry, 12 or Hycars of
age, one gig, and one cotton gin, token an the
property of George W. Welch, to satisfy a fi
iu in favor of A Low Si Co., and others
Also—One lot in the town of Dublin, No. 22,
lying on Gaine* street, taken ns the properly
of W. II. Coleman, to satisfy Charles Kelsey,
k Co. on the foreclosure of a mortgage, and the
premises pointed out in said mortgage.
Also—One lot of laud, No. 320 in the 17th
district, originally Wilkinson, now Laurens
county, taken as the property of Simon Smith,
to satisfy a li fa in favor of Fnlwood k Welch ;
levied on by a Countable and returned to me
Also—One tract of laud taken os the proper
ty of Jesse Fuliford, to satisfy a ti fa in favor of
Itohert \V. W Wynne and others, containing
232 nereis, adjoining Charles Mo win an and o*
tliers— pointed out by Jesse Fuliford.
Abo—One negro man named Bob, taken ns
the property of James Beaty, dec’d,to satisfy
two li fas in favor of John Fulhvood L others.
Also—One negro man named Jack and one
piece of land, containing 46 1-2 acres, lying on
the Oconee, generally called Holmes’ Bland,
taken as the property of Thomas Holmes, dec.
to satisfy J. J Guyton and others—levied by
S. Dukes, constable, and returned to me.
U. KINCHEN, Stiff
April 24.
S\\cy\(Th . ••
W .LL BE SOLD, on the first Tuesday in
v ▼ .Imiio next, al Rabun court-house, with
in (lie usual hours,
4AH> Acres of Lwm\,
known in the plan oftbofiili district, by Mo. 20,
levied on by virtue of an execution in favor ot
I’cter Reid, against John McKenzie, as the pro
perly of said John McKenzie, to satisfy tlie a-
foresaid ti fa.
SHADRICK MORRIS, Stiff
February 22.
Notice to Druggist:}.
\ Fi.N F. ii«*orlment nf M EDI (’INKS, f.'c.
- can he had upon liberal terms, by ap-
phentiun either at Reek will Il.jdiiim's
Ofliee, or at the Bookstore of Ginn & Cur
tis.
N. R. If not disposed of shortly at Pri
vate Sale, they will he sold at Auction.
Dee. 4. 48_
Vi\\\ vvtvmvnuMAt.
FT!HE StJlifUTUBER informs his friends and
J. the public, that lie lias opened a
llouso of Entertainment,
at the Slionli of Ogecbee, on the road leading
from Augusta to Milledgi-v die, Sandersville and
Marion His stables are large and commodi
ous, and kept by attentive ostlers, and will he
at all times well supplied with provender.-—His
table will be furnished with (he best the coun
try cau nlford.
JOHN H. WRIGHT.
Shoals of Ogechee, Ian 7. 49—if.
A (VrcivtYt*T£ivm.
T nK H liS< H'BFRl.a-j.-st'.VMtviJa,*
■ signinriit ol vnlunhle
of Gold and f ; ilver, embossed a u t ,, j j 1(
will be fold vprv low fur < »
ton Reids
February 25
W( IUON HI.Hit Ir
8-4 r.
CONDITIOA9.
The book will In* neatly printed and subitan-
Bally bound in one large royal octavo volume,
in size equal to 4< Ingenol/'s Digest of ‘he Laics
of the United States," and will be furnished lo
subscribers at the price that book sells for iu
Philadelphia, t<» wit, Seven Dollars per copy,
payable on delivery of the work ; which will
be ready by November or December next.
Gil ANT LAND OltME.
Milledgeville, 22d April, 182*2
(T/* Gentlemen who arc willing to assist us in
obtaining subscribers to the abort work, arc re
quested lo take charge of a subscripiiun paper.
NEW-YORK, 18th March, 1822
LAW NOTICE.
C TOLL!.NS and IIANNAY are preparing tn
A put tn press, an enlarged and much up-
proved edition nf
Comyn’s Digest
OF THE
LAWS of EXtiliAXt),
now publishing in London,nssuon usthework
is received, which is daily expected, it will be
put Into the hands of the American Editor, to
make addition* and references to the decisions
of our Courts; and if it should not be given iu
the London edition, they intend to add a gene
ral Index to the work, which will greatly en
hance its value.
The excellence of this work for methodical
distribution, deop research, eompendioumess
and accuracy ot expression, is too well known
to need anything said in illustration of its plan
and character. The edition now proposed will
combine much valuable matter, not iu any for
mer edition, with emendations and copious re
ferences, which will render it deeidedi) the
best work of the kind that has yet appeared ;
it will supercede the use of Bacon's Abridge
ment, and be alForded at about one half the
price.
0:r Subscriptions received for the above
work, and copies forwarded to any part of the
state by Ginn 4* Curtis, Booksellers and Stati
oners, Milledgeville.
May 7. 13—If.
Seventy-Jive Dollars Reward.
MAIL ROBBERY.
S TOI'THE VILLAIN—Broka the Jail
of Clark county, ami made his escape
therefrom, on the 10th inst.
•ULUU YMVsWDlYTU,
a youth about seventeen or Hi years of age,
five feet 10 or It inches high, spare built,
blue eyes, fair complected, dark hair, very
forward in company, arid fond of gambling,
lie had hern employed to carry the mail of
the United States on the route from Milledge-
ville to the Hurricane Shoals, in Jackson
county, and was arrested and committed for
trial at Milledgei ille before the Sixth Circuit
Court of the United States. The above re
ward will lie git en to any person that will
deliver him to the Jailor of Milledgeville, or
of Jaclnun county.
THOMAS HYDE, />. M
At Jefferson, Jackson county, Geo.
April 11, 1324, ii—tf
Y\>YY.\T\A>.V.
P ARFM' rS and Guardian* are informed,and
particularly those who have children un
der the care of the tier Daniel Duffey, that be
will continue his School near my house until
the 1st of April 1823. Students hy making ear
ly application will he received for the whole of
said time, or forsix months.
Board and tuition as usual.
WILLIAM C. OSBORN
April 27. 12—«
Administrator’s Sale.
W ILL BI-. SOLI), at Fort-IIatvkins, on
Wednesday the 12th day of June next,
The Personal Property
of the Estate of Bailey Harris.*, deceased—con
sisting of sundry articles too tedious to men
tion. Terras of sale cash.
3.M. INGERSOL, Adin’r
April 27. 12—-td-
i
HIE BUbSC'KIBEK oilers lor *Hle, upon
reasonable terms, the two following
Lots of LamY....Yi7. •.
M’o fid, 10th district Dooly, and No. 230, 8th
district Monroe county, drawn hy me in the last
Land Lottery. The terms will be made known
by enquiring of Col. John .! Maxwell, of Bry
an county, who is authorized hy me to sett the
»«me. THOMAS GRAY
Brynn county, April 5 lo—8t
Law Notice.
T HE SUB8CRIBEItS have associated to
gether iu the name of
Jones omt Uowoi-A,
in the PRACTICE of the LAW. Their oflice
is opened on the West side of the Penitentiary
square. ) hey will attend tile several Superior
Courts of tin* Ocuiulgec Circuit, and ot tire
couulies of Hancock and Twiggs
SEABORN IONES.
THACKER B. HOWARD
P S The subscriber will continue to practice
in the Federal Court. 3 j
January 1,1822. 40 tf
I AW.—The undersigned have formed ac_~
I ) ncetion in the 1‘1'jiCTICt: Of LAW —
they will attend tlio Courts in the counties ot
Morgan, Greene, Putnam, Baldwin and Jasper
in the Ocmulgee Circuit—in Gwinnett, Walton,
Newton, Henry, Fayette ki Clark in the West
ern—iu Wilkes and Hancock in the Northern
'their Ofliee is situated near the Posl-Ollice, on
the main street, where one or the other may
lie constantly found, when not on the Circuit
WILLIAM C DAWSON.
YELVERTON P. KING
Grcensborough, April 6. 10 13t
Sy the. President 0} the United States.
WiiEHKAs, the President of the United
States is authorized hy law to cause lands to
he offered lor sale :
Therefore I, Jamf.s Monrof, President
of the United States, ilo hereby declare and
make known that the public sales shall he
held as follows, viz :
At the Land Office at Terre Haute, in In
diana, on the first Monday in July next, for
tlie sale of
Townships 17and 18, in range 1, east of the 2d
principal meridian line
17 and IS, in ranges 1 to 1), west do
At the Land Office at Vandalia, in Illinois,
on the third Monday in July next, for the
sale of
TownshipsII, 12, 13 and 14, in ranges I and 2,
east of the 3d principal meridian line
11, 12,13, 14 and to, in ranges 3 and 4, do
At the same place, on the third Monday
in August next, for the sale of
Townships II, 12, 13, Hand lo, in ranges 5, ti
and 8, east of the 3d principal meridian line
11, in range 7, do
At the Land Office at Palestine, in Illinois,
on the first Monday iu August next, lor the
sale of
Townships 6,7,8and P, in ranges 9, 10 and II,
east of 3d principal meridian line
6, 0, 7, 8 Si 9, in range 14, west of 2d do
8 uud 9 1-2 ami 13, do
At the same place, on the first Monday in
September next, for the sale of
Townships 10, II, 12 and 13, in ranges9,1 Oil 11,
east of 3d principal meridian line
10, 11, 12 and 13, in ranges 12, 13 u
14, west of 2d do
At the same place, on the fust Monday in
October next, for the sale of
Townships 14, to, Hi and 17, in ranges 9, lost 11,
east of 3d principal meridian line
14, lo, 16&i 17, ill ranges 12, 13ii 14,
west of 2d do
At the same place, on the first Monday in
November next, for the sale, of
Townships 18, 19, 20&.21, in ranges 9,10 11,
ea-0 of 3d principal meridian line
18,19,20and2l,in ranges It an li 14,
w est of2d principal meridian line
18,19and20, in ruuge 12, ilo do
18 11, do do
17, 18, 19 and 20 10, do do
At the Land Ofliee for the Northern ihs
trict of Louisiana, at the town of Ouachita,
on the first Monday in November next, for
the, sale of
Townships 15, 16, 17, 18 and 19, in ranges 1,2,
3,4 anil 5, west of the meridian line
At the Land Office at the Seat of J usticeo
the county of Independence, in the Arkansas
territory, for the sale of such land* of the
United States as are situated iu the following
described townships and ranges, and which
have been excluded from the lottery of the
lands appropriated lor satisfy ing w ai rants for
military services, viz:
On the first Monday in August next, for
the sale of such of the above described lands
as are situated in the following townships
and ranges, viz:
1 owns hips 1,2,3,4,5, 7,8, 9 and 20, in range 1,
east of the fit li meridian line
IN consequence of false malin„». jT
I port, having been eirculaled, and to
Hi!!* have )•-»-> J •• -o • uuiimie to l-e punc
tually paid, when presented al lb- Shoals uf
Ogacliee. II ii. T. H KENDALL
ID' The .ini’ml a Chronicle Mini I; athm^bg.
Aocj, will give the abort four insertion?, ai.j
forward theiraccounGtothe Shoals ofOgeel re
April 25. 12_.it
6 .V \ 3LV li l* iu, VHT,
riAHAT most valuable Aere Lot in Milled?*.
J. ville, lying nt the Intersection of J, ffV:? ou
and Hancock streets, whereon Timothy Bruen
has commenced the necessary buildings for a
Hotel, is now- offered for sale on a long credit
Persons wishing to own this properly, w,ii
please apply to
JOEL CRAU 1 OltB
14—11
Milledgeville, May 10
.'An IWvvspvv \Ynn\pt\
nflO take charge of a plantation and ab nt 20
J hand*. A person qualified to lake cltnifo
of the above, and can come well recommend*
od for sobriety and industry, w ill receive libera
UhcAvNvpW & \Yv\\>\nu*n
W ILL attend to professional business in
tile counties of Houston, Henry and
Monroe.
Milledgeville, Feb. 13. 4—tf.
Ravven 6 azvUv.
FTMIF. undivided half of the interest in (he
X Darien Gazette is for sale. Terms liber
al. For particulars, apply at the office to
j. M. MAXWELL.
TT The Editors of papers in Savannah,
Charleston, Augusta, Milledgeville, Richmond,
(Va) and Fayetteville, (N. C.) are requested
by ti brother of the type, lo give the above a
few insertions. April 20
( 4 EOrtGl A, Baldwin county.
John Bozeman of Capi, Webb’s district,
tolled before Inmes Fleming, esq.
A Bright Bay Marc,
between 8 or lo years old, with the left hind
foot white to the first joint, star in her fore
head, and h snip on her right nostril—abo, an
old .scar of a fistula on her shoulder, about 5
feet high—appraised to $ 70.
ROBERT WOODALL of Captain Dozier
district tolled before James P Dozier, e.-q.
A Sorrel Horse,
eight or nine years oi l, 4 feet 10 or 11 incite
high, branded on the left shoulder with the let
ter S„ w ith some other appearances of a brand
on the same should r—also, branded uti the
left thigh with the lo;ter S, some white hairs
on the neck occasioned by the collar, ap
pears to be a natural pacer—appraised to fortv
dollars.
THOMAS II. KENAN, Cl k. I. C
May 3. 13—31
C 3 EOKGIA, Baldwin county.
T Wh.son l’ciiNKR, ot Capt. Russell's dis
trict, tolled before, John R. Scott, esq. an
tray MARE, supposed to be about twenty years
of age, bay, with a blaze iu her face, two fore
feet yvbite, shod before, 4 feet 11 inches high
appraised to twelve dollars and fifty cents,
March 12th, 1822.
THOMAS II. KEXAX, Clk. I. C.
May 13. 1-1—;3l
Sportsmen ot'tlie Pitt.
A MAIN of Cocks to .hew twenty-three,
■' V and to fight for one hundred dollars the
light and one thousand the odd, will be fought
at Sparta, on the fourth Monday in May.
Sparta, Geo. March 27 8 tf
[tf The Editor of I he Raleigh Star, is re
quested to publish the foregoing six times, and
forward his account to this ofliep. for payment
JOB PRINTING,
Executed with neatness nnd dispatch,
at the Recorder Officd.
I, 2, 3,4. 6 Art), in range
2. do
1,2, 3, 4, 6, 6, 7, 8 Si. 9,
3,
do
1,2, id, It, 12, 13 Si 14,
4,
do
I, 2,
1,2,3,9,13,14,15,18,19
6,
do
and 20,1, west do
On the first Monday in September next,
for the. sale of such of the above described
lands as arc situated in the following town
ships and ranges, viz:
townships 1, 2, 18, 19and 20, in range 2, west
of the 6th meridian line
1, 15, 1(7, 17, 18, 19 anil 20, 3, do
1, 10, 11. 13,14,15, IfiV 19,4, do
1, 2,9, 10, 11, 12, 13 and 10, 5, do
1,2,4,5,6, 8, 9, 10, II, 12,
13 and 18, fi, do
On the first Monday in October next, for
the sale of such of the above described lands
as are situated in the following townships
and ranges, viz :
Townships 1,2,3, 4,5,6,7,10,11,12,13,15,1(7,
17, 18, 19 and 20, in range
7, west nf 51 It me
ridian line
1,2,3,4,5, 0.7,8,
9, 10,16, Hi, 17,
18,19 and 20, 8,
1,2,3,4,5,15, 7,8,
9,10, 11, 12, IS,
19 and 20, 9,
19, 10,
On (he first Monday in November next,
for the sale of sueh of the above described
lands as are situated in the following town
ships and ranges, viz:
do
i, 2,3, 4, 5, 0, 7
8,
>, 10 and 11, ii
range
lu,
w *st of tlio Gtl
uiiTidiau line
1,3, 4, 5, 6, 7,8.
SillO, in range 11
do
2, 3,4, 5, 6, 7, B,
0 hih! lo,
C, 3, 4, 6, 6, 7,
12
do
8 oml y,
13,
do
3, 4, 5, B, 7 and 8
14
do
4, 5 fUld 7,
15
do
Cj, G uud 7,
Hi
do
17
do
Farh sain will commoner with the. lowest
number of section, township and range, and
proceed in regular numerical order.
The lands reserved hy law for the use of
schools, or lor other purposes, will he rescrv
ed from sale.
Given tinder my hand at (he City of
Washington, this 14th day of March, n:-M
JAMES MONROE
By the President:
Josiaii Mr.ics.
March Iff.
Comm'r of the Gen. 1.a-.ul Office
ff -INI
Entertainment.
T HE SUBSCRIBERS beg leave to inform
the public,that they have taken that large
and comm, dioushouse hi Eatonton, lately oc
cupied hy Benjamin Williamson, a* a Tavern
where they hope, by their exertions, to merit t
share of the public patronage. Tlteir Siabit
will be furnished with the best provender, an i
attended by faithful ostlers. Their Bar and T
bte will be the lies! tin* country nifords.
7V()ODVVAilU L J. M ILL I AMSO
February 25, 3—if.
al wages
April 0
Enquire of the Printers.
10—fit
N’dnv in IXnl&win JwU,
A NEGRO MAN named ’TOM, who firs*
iV said he belonged to Mieklebeirj, and i>
let-wards to I.itlli-berrj Lucas—he i* about 7
feet « or 7 inches high, very dark contplci t-d
speak* broken and fine voice, can hardly l-e
understood.
May 7.
FRED. SANFORD, Jailor,
13—31
V o lure owl,
T^OR the balance of the present yer-
I- negro mail who is a lolerahh* plantation
blacksmith, and also a pretty good field
hand. Enquire ol the printers.
March 10. r.
I on GoIIhi’s Reward.
R AN A WAY from tho.
subscriber about six
days H£o,* negro boy naun
ed
T O M,
about lit year* of age—No particular de-i rip-
li°» ca» be given of him; he is generally known
about this place, h*Iic* has been kepi as’a house
servant for several years.
SEABORN JONES.
May 13.
NOTICE.
I HAVE found a certain Tract of Lnn.l lying
iu Madison county on (he waters of Broad
river, formerly the property of Francis Me Well
in default for Tax for the year 1821, containing
two hundred acres, anil 1 do not know ot any
attorney or trustee legally constituted in this
stale—I do call upon the person that claim? the
said land to come forward and pay up the tax
and cost, or I shall proceed as the"law directs
in such cases.
HIRAM HAMPTON, n t r
March 21,1822 8—film
GEORG IA, Telfair county.
Iu Telfair Superior court, March Term, 1821.
Thomas Winofiilp, j A RVI.E Mil for the
j' J !• foreclosure of a nwn-
GEonnE ISixoif. )gage.
rixHE petition of Thomas Wingfield,shew dli,
that on the eighteenth day of August, enii-
teen hundred and seventeen, George Nison ,9,1
in the county of Greene, in the state afore ik
mortgage to your petitioner, all these tracts or
parcels of land, lying and being in the county of
Tellnir, formerly \\ ilkinsou, know n by nu;n-
bet'378 in the 9th district of old Wilkinson, muv
Tellnir, containing 202 1-2 acres—also, on"
Fraction, known by number 372, containing
141) fi-loths acres, 9th district—also, one other
Fraction, containing 124 8-llMhs acres, know j
hy No. 378 and 9lh district—one oilier Frni-ti-
im, known by No. 380, i„ 9th district, contain
ing 195 1-2 acres—also, one other Fraction,
known by No. 379, in 9th district, containing
35 acres—also, one other Fraction, known by
No. 3*7, ill 9th district, containing 9t)6-]otlix
acres—also, one other Fraction, known by No.
371, in 9th district, containing 35 7-10tbs acres
—also, one square of pi 11 ey-woods land, known
by No. 350, iu 9lli district, containing 2o2 1-2
acres; the said tracts and fractions being and
lying iu tlio 9llt district, formerly Wilkinson,
now Telfair county, for the better securing Hie.
payment of three several promissory muv,
hearing even date with said mortgage, ear it
for the sum of one thousand dollars; one
duo the last day of January, 1819, the second,
tho last of January, 1820, and the third, on or
before tin- last day of January, 1821—Sc tin
George Nixon having failed to pay said sums ui
money—on motion of T G. Holt, attorney
for mortgagee, it is ordered that unless the ;.,oti
George do pay into the Clerk’s office ol (lie su
perior court ot said county, the principal, inte
rest and cost due on said mortgage, within
twelve mouth* front this date, the equity of re
demption be, and is hereby forever Imred an J
foreclosed, provided notice of this rule be pub
lished once a month for twelve mouths hi 1: *
Southern Recorder, printed at Milledgeville.m
served on the mortgagor or his spec ial -cm!
stx months before the time the twelve iuu..;l1
shall expire.
GEORGIA, Telfair rowdy.
I CF.K] It 1 \ the foregoing to be a true copy,
taken front the Minutes, this 2Lh Sepieni .
!S2l. Witness,my handund privutc seal,there
being no seal of office.
D. McRAE, Cl k S. C
October 22. m i»_
RI LE NISI.
Jones Superior Court, April Term, 1822.
p appearing lo the Court, that George Iff Lu
ll eas, was in po?«ossion of an original r! * d
for one hundred and twenty-live aere* ol I
part of Lot Number Seventy-six in Hie ciglitn
district of Jones county, made and executed i»
him by Samuel Haw kin*, on the fifteenth d o'
of November in the year eighteen hundred nm!
sixteen, w hich deed is either lost Or deslro? • ,
so that the said George I! Lucas cannot <'-m. ■
mand it, and he having herewith produced a
copy in substance of -aid deed to he filed
tiie Clerk's Office of this Court • On moti. „ -
Loivther mid Webb, atlornics for said Gec-ni
15. Lucas, it is ordered, that said copv deed
established in lien of (lie original so Lei
destroyed, unless sufficient cause lo tliecot.fi--
ry be shown at the Buperior Outlet fi*r -*.d
county oil the second Monday in October n- xi,
od that n copy nftiiis rule l-e published in 01 •
of (lie public Gazelles of Ibis 5t.de, nt least once
a month oil'd the -ittine of said Court
A true copy from me juniuUr,.1 .Ah, A. i:
1822.
EDWIN BOWEN, C 8 C
April 22, 1322. 11—tnOm
BLANKS.
Wriu of Scirefacias, Denis, Di’clnnv-
tions, Executions. Lc. fcte.
Foil Sali: at Tin. Ri.10r.Di 1. (.mu