The constitutionalist. (Augusta, Ga.) 1823-1832, May 10, 1825, Image 3

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■ f ■ We stop the press to announ ;e the dis j tressing intelligence of too murder <»f tin Indian Chief Gen. Wm. Mclntosh, an.! s the Chief of Cowetau,Tustunnugge, To mm t i which was brought to the Governor yester a day evening by Chilly Mclntosh, the Gen- g eral’s son, and five Chiefs of the Nation, n who made their escape from the Massacre. »' The mischief was perpetrated last Saturday o by a large body of Indians, supposed to be r four hundred, who attacked Gen. Mein c tosh in his own house, on the very day he h appointed to set oft' at the head of amission p to explore the country west of the Missis- ti sippi for the future residence of the Nation, a There is too much reason to fear, that while Ij me i were the instigators »f this horrid butch- d ary. [MilledgevilLe Recorder, ci I We have this day received in our official capacity as a Board of Health, a written report from the Committee of Physicians, stating that the Small Pox has manifested itself in five cases in our village. From the novelty of the case, vve fear the citizens will not take timely alarm or adopt the ne- cessary precautions, although the best means a that our prudence and experience could sug-'jj gest have been adopted by the Board; yet !S[ we deem it ourduty to make public far and c near the facts as they exist, and recommend j a to our citizens abioad to keep aloof, until the m danger has subsided. We have dispatched \j an express for the Vaccine matter, and ear- t nestly recommend to our citizens the gene- r ral use of vaccination.—Whenever the dan- , ger subsides, we shall cheerfully announce it t trough the same medium. f PETER W GAUTIER, > t REUBEN C. SHORTER, . ( JOSEPH BvCON, «;§ i STEPHEN I). CRANE. i 5; 8 , JOHN BALDWIN. ; OWEN H. KEN VN. 1 TORNEUUS 0. TURHUNE, « 'OHN KINDRU’K. J . S. D. CRANE, Sec’iy. ; l lay, 1820. - -- - - L <C°piJ\ fatter from Gov. Troup to the nrd of Health of Monticello. Executive Department, > Milled*eville, 2d Way, 1825.$ —-V letter received by the Uditmf d IP Recorder from the Board of t Health Town of Monticello, announ cing th.-'ive cases of Small-pox had oc curred re> having been politely communi cated t v>j I have thought proper to dis patch av ore 93 to you, that every necessary precauthiiny be adopted without delay to ‘prevent 'spreading of the infection ; and for (he foment „f this object, I know of no means moifft. a csnus than the establish ment of a itral Hospital for the sick, the •concentrat) «,f them there, and its insula tion so secol, that there would be no pos sibility of cdnunication between the afflic ted and ot.hc Very Ruectfully, 0. M. TROUP. .Messrs. P, Wr\uTtEn, nnd others com posing the lard of lle.nllh of Monticello. -ao*- __ An attem was made last night about •eight o’clockto set fire to the three story hnck buildin«n Broughton street, between B ill and VVo'aker-streets, belonging to the estate of 0. t Si-rei.e White. It was ex tingofcsheibefore anv essential injury had b‘eo don to the budding. The fire was upplied y means of lightwood chins, near th<* (irfphcv the third story. The house is unocupied, except bv carpenters, who are prepring it for the reception of a ten a,it* A til white man was seen coming from the hilding at the time the alarm was given. Tin same house it will be recollec ted was attested to be set on fire some tioie ago, in a I rawer of one of *he closets J We entreat evey citizen to be "atcbful. i Sav. Georgian, -VZ/& e, learn (hat ft is probable, the sloop j Three Brothers has received so much inju ry iv the accident which lias befillen her, at Mr. Flournoy’s plantation, as to ren der her incapable of repair. About one hundred bales or upwards, of the cotton are very much damaged, which being long sta ple, the loss will he considerable. We par ticularly regret the loss sustained by Capt. II uvi.and ; he is an industiious man, who has been long in the trade between Darien and this place, and can ill afford it .—lbid. Gen. Lv Fayette left New-Orleans on the lath April for Natchez. [ \Chas . City Gaz. Newspaper Market. —lt must be marvel lously gratifying to newspaper editors to be informed, that in the recent rage for specu lation, and the consequent rise of articles, which have extended from cotton to cow’s' horns, and even affected the price of candy, (which, we learn, has experienced an ad vance in our market of nearly half a cent per stick) the article in which they are interested has not been overlooked. is t stated that the London newspapers have advanced a half-penny a day for three da vs, and the demand greatly increased ! We do | not see why the rise of newspapers in K , land should not affect the market here as e well as the rise of other stock articles, and d we can assure the public they may run the t risk of many a worse speculation than be- t , 'Joining subscribers to our journal. j, Providence Journal, a Mr. Editor, ( IN putting together the de- ; sultory remarks of which the following are t i part, it was my intention to aim a blow i it that morbid perception of every tiling s grand and beautiful in tiie elforts of imagi- - nation, which causes so many of the wor- i shippers of the Goddess of dullness in this \ moral and religious age, to look with hoy- i •or at the shortest llight of fancy, and to ‘ ;onsider poets as a race of beings to whom i lis satanic majesty has not only a fee sim- i >le title in reversion, but a life lease whilst t they continue above ground—controlling I ind directing them in this wm ld and final- ( y receiving them into his dominions after t Jeath. Among the unfortunate beings so | mnsigaed to the “ fallen Arch-Angel”|i Lord Byron stands pre-eminent; nothing! vliich could detract from his mural dispo sitions or intellectual energies, has been ; imitted, and it is attempted i “ To bup” $ •• His name from out lliu temple whore the dead i “ Arc honour’d by the nations.” A Cenotaph of obloquy and calumny has ieen erected for him, which even Caligula ind Nero escaped ; and trie very name of s dm who lived a victim to the revengeful spirit of a cold hearted woman, and the cowardly malice of a ministerial faction ;*i and who died a martyr in the cause of li i, herty, is now considered as synonymous with i fiend. Mr. editor, I (in common, with all ; tiie true lovers of genuine poetry) owe much to Lord Byron, some of the darkest moments ol a life not eminently happy, have been cheered and irradiated by the fire of his genius, and the best apology I can make for the rashness of this attempt to defend him, is that with me, it is a “ la bur of love.” Should my health and lei sure admit of it, you shall hear from me again, of the funner I have scarcely en ough to swear by, but of the latter, (belong ing as I do to that idle race of drones call ed Lawyers,) I am cursed with a plethoric] abundance—l have shut up my office, and to put the best face on the matter, intend shortly to write over its door Deus nobis hoec otia fecit, What are the distinguishing properties of a Poet ?—An imagination ardent ns the summer sun, strong and soaring like the eagle’s pinion—delicate, chaste and dis criminating ; a judgment clear and com prehensive, able at once to compose and de compose, to classify and arrange, and to simplify anti analyze; a faculty of ob servation which suffers nothing to escape its notice, which constantly keeps every sense alive to its appropriate perception, and a memory capacious, and retentive; these powers of intellect enable him to acquire,— and to be a great Poet he must have acquir ed an unbounded opulence of language—a mass of facts, collected from every art and science, poetry and history, and a store of ideas in which the subjects of these facts, have been compared and contrasted, and their relations and oppositions in every point of view accurately noted—thus arm ed let him enter on the noble field of exer tion, secure of the palm of immortality, and never doubting that there is ample scope for an original exercise of his powers, lor infinite, as the infinite devisibility of matter, time, and space, are the associations of external objects in our minds, and the modes of reasoning and feeling arising from such associations. What developement of these powers is necessary to entitle their possessor to the appellation of a Poet? Not that “ Arthurs” should be piled on “ Alfreds” until the “ mundane Gods” are glutted witli a heca tomb of Folio Epics. Leigh Hunt said that if Shakespeare had have written only this single line in the merchant of Venice, “ How sweet the moon-light sleeps upon the bank,” die should have been called a Poet, and I j say with less ex'ravagance (I think) that I the following lines from the first (Janto of Don Juan” would have better entitled L°rd Byron to the same appellation if he had never written any others. ” ’Ti* sweet to hear “ At midnight o’er the Mue ami moon-lit deep, The song anil oar of Adna’s Gondolier, By distance mellow’d, o’er the waters sweep r ’Til sweet to sec the evening star appear, ’1 is sweet to listen as the night winds creep From leaf to leaf.—’tig sweet to view on high, The rainbow based on ocean span the sky. ’Til sweet to hear the honest lark Bay deep-rnoutird welcome as we draw near home ; ’Tis sweet to know there is an eye will mark Our coming, and look brighter when we come. ’Tis sweet to be awaken’d by the dark, Or (pil’d by falling waters,—sweet the Imm 01 bees—the voice of girli—the song of birds, The lisp of children, and their earliest words.” I am aware that the peculiarity of ex pression which characterizes these stanzas is not original—that it belongs to Theocri tus, and has been imitated by several of our best Poets—four lines from an ode of Dr. Drake’s, 1 cannot resist the temptation to quote. “ Sweet is the mild moon, chaste and while, And listTiin lo the oceans roar, And sweet the blue wave foaming light, A <d d in; on the hollow iho e”—(»>de o Laura, i The celebrated passage in the fourth book ot Paradise lost, beginning “ Sweet is the breath of morn, tier rising sweet,” Will be remembered by every lover of English poetry —but who has notn ed “ the waicli-dog’s honest bark” and yet who that evir had a home a .d a dog to guard it, thm I does not Jed the beauty and naturalness ol the passage; and who (hat ever lay swl 1 teringon a feather bed in a summer nigtn'i aod mentally trying out wiih the unfortun-| ate wight in Oviu, Vene Aura, Vene Aura! ( that does not feel his very soul freshened ami revived as he hears “ the night winds creep from leaf to leaf” —but enough of this Wordsworth it seems wrote elegies on straws —1 have no ambition to imitate him, - l*upe and Byron have been denied a high] rank as I* mis, hecau-e neither ot them ever wrote an Kpic poem—-if tins criterion be; the true one, lilackmoor must stand on the 11 very pinnacle of Parnassus, for he wrote!; many Kpies, and Pope destroyed his onlvj pretensi m to elevation on the ‘ Mount ofji Apollo” when be burnt his “ Alcander”—,< Ids “ Rape of the hock” which for power ' of imagination, and richness and felicity of expression has seldom oem equalled and perhaps never excelled, must go for noth ing, and he must be content to sink quietly with the heroes of his own “ Uunciud.” The claims of Lord Byron, the effect and influence of hit poems, and of poetry in general, it is my purpose hereafter to ex amine—subject nevertheless to the conditions stipulated us aforesaid. A. B, C. &c. PIRACY AND MURDER. Wo learn try capt. Luddington, of the sloop James Monroe, arrived vesterday front Nuuvii.au and Nassau, (N. P.) that the schr. Plant r, (’apt. Kluhiuue (formerly a coas ter from this port to the southward,) which sailed from New-York, for Neuvitas, on the lath Febinary last, was fallen in with about the 10th March, oft' Neuvitas, by a piratical pilot boat rigged schooner, mount ing 5 guns—who took possession ot her, and run to leeward of Neuvitas—where it is re laled they murdered the captain and all hands. The above pirate is supposed to be the vessel captured by the United States steun gilliot Sea Gull, and the boats of HBM Frigate Dartmouth —goods h< ving been sou nl on board, kn wir to h ive been shipped in the Planter, t’ap .L. also states that a boat from Matauzas, had arrived at Neuvitas, a short time previous to Ins sailing, who reported that she had been fallen in with by the Colombian pi ivateer schr. Re ; Capt. Bedford, who took out her cargo, consisting of Beeswax, and allowed them to proceed. The captain yf the boat ' stated, that while in company with the Re ’ venge, he saw an American cruiser send her : boats on board of the schr. Planter, then ly ing at anchor near the shore The Lieuten • ant commanding the boats w'ent on board of the P. when one of the Pirates, supposed to • be the captain, presented what he called his - commission—upon which the Lieutenant * shot him through the head. ! \fChas. Mercury. ! A letter from an officer at Ley West, ’ states that some of the b axes containing ■ Claret, found in the hands of the Pirates 1 captured by'die Sea Gull, were branded— I •* Nov. 15, 1824, B. & K. and underneath, 1 B. 12, anil G. 2f. bv .1. G. iswift, surveyor .ol tbe port ul New-York.” i’nese marks 1 are found to correspond with a shipment f made by the schooner Planter, Kldridge, for ■ Neuvitas, and render it certain that, that - vessel had the dreadful misfortune to fall . into the hands of the Pirates. 2 The small figure head of a vessel, (a fe > male,) found on board of die piiatical sebr. * has been forwarded to this city, and maybe s seen at the Ocean Insurance Office. e On the morning of the 12th April, Gen. 1 Lafayette was waited upon by the Bar of the city of New-Orleans. P. Dabiguy, s Rsq, delivered in the French language an 2 appropriate and eloquent address, it ex pressed in strong and ardent terms, the feel ings of gratitude and veneration which the ' legal profession of that city entertain for the “ Nation’s Guest.” The reply of (he Gen. 1 which was in the same language, was very 2 happy and well adapted to the occasion.— The General was to leave New-Orleans, for Louisville, on Friday, the 15th. I N. Y. American. t f An Offer,—-■ George W. P. Custis, of Ar lington, having been informed by eminent b Planters of the South, that his estate of Smith’s island, at the Capes of Virginia, pos- ‘sses peculiar advantages for the raising ol Sea Island Cotton, and being desirous that ho experiment should be. made, offers to giv the benefits arising from the cultiva tion of ten or twenty acres, free of any c urge, for one or two years, and should such experiment succeed, will give to the experimenter the refusal of the property on lease of 15 or twenty years, on reasonable terms Smith’s island is situated in the Atlantic Ocean, immediately off Cape Cnarles, and contains about 5000 acres. i&amcti, On Sunday evening- Ist May, by ih« IW. IvJwnrJ Swinny, 4 Mr. THOfIAS H HICK to Miss SARA If ANN BUI ROf iOMs. both of Hi • City. . **9***** tm srm mm I On Friduy last 6l!» in. 3. if a pu inniiHry complaint, willi which he but] long fipen visited, RORIIKP VALFIKK, K»q. late Judge of the .Superior Courts of tin* Middle Circuit, of this Slut*, in the hist year ul ft* ngr. lie has left a \vil» and se ven children to feel and lament the losa *»f one whose ninny v r lues -nJeared him to hi* mu Mediate connections, uid who wan .. esteenijtd und respected by ,m extensive circle of fri nds. In . JutrlTcath society lias lost a worthy citizen and an honest in n. [Chronicle. At. a meeting I l e members of the Bar residing at Augusta, held at the i it y it .11, on Sa'up'ay die fill ol Mai, 182 b, the lion. UoßK.ur If. I(..i;>. I'm called to the I iihiur, and W m i. b aau, appointed Se-j i Cretan}. I On motion of John G. Pnlhill, K.-q.— Iti was unaiiimou is Resolved, I hit bis meet mg deeply I or :it ihe deaMi of >lie i(nn. 'Rob»rt lYullcer. late Jm* * ot 1 1 1 • • r Courts of tills Circuit, m wooin lue piuies «ion has lost an amiable and esteemed mem i her, and Society, an honest man and wor ' thy citizen. Resolved, That as a testimony of res pect for the memory of Judge Walker, the Bar of the city wear the usual baiige of I mourning, for thirty days; and that our | ;brethren throughout tliu circuit be re-pect jfully requested to unite with us in this re solution. Resolved, That the proceedings of this meeting, signed by the Chairman and Se cretary, be published in the papers of the city. R. R. IlKkjj )^Chairman, VN m. T. Gould, Avery. * the 53d year of his age, he win a young man whose exemplary nuire deportment endeared him to a numerous circle of acquaint* ( nnrri who w >ll Pei |lvlnn o. n his li>>. Hin friends and tlmar ol hi' ... i i;n*rs are re spec II idly invited to attend his funeral this inoru ing. at ft o’clock, from tlie residence of'Henry Mealing in Ellis Street, a lew doors East of \Vashington street. The Georgia Fencibles are particularly requested to at tend the tunerd of Joseph Mealing—to-morrow morning at 7 o’clock I X At‘u*c to i / Il'IE Steam !L*at South Carolina, is expected 3 here TO.MOBffOW, a'ul will have immeili . ale despatch. F r freight, only apply to Egan & McLaughlin. I May 10 U 91 Augusta. ¥i*ee ScAvool, i 0 r IMIE Managers are requested to attend a regu * tar meeting THIS EVENING, ut the lecture ? room at half past seven o’clock. \ 1 I. Henry, Sec , y s May 101825 it' 6l t ;, £/* A Meeting of the Bo rd of 1 vianagers of the Augusta Aux l.ary B'ble So . ciety, will be field at the Lecture Hoom THIS EVE.VING, at half past 7 o’rl >rlt. I \V r m. Kostvvick, Sec J y. t May 10 It 91 - JSOT.CE. ’ SAV Thui'sday next, at 10 o’clock, A. M. the - STALLS in the Mark l l will ba Iv iited fur - lie year from rhai .’av, at which time all persona f lehrmis to obtain a place (or vending Beef, &C |( are inritea t(> attend. Ibe renting to lake place at the Market It 'use. s By order oj Market Committee. 1 fcleo. M. Walker, Clerk Ct/y Council. May 10 1' Ql N oticc. r 4 BANK BILL lias been found by a servant s t\ of ibe subscriber, which the owner can have s hv giving a satisfactory description of tbe sane. - paying for this advertisement and a snail reward , o the finder. r Patrick H. Cams. S May 10. 1325 91 t * 8.-vBItELS Marker*. I, No. 3, of a superior quality 1 -4JtsKi>&3L for sale, in b ■ delivered at the Wharf, on the arrival of the Steam Boat South . Carolina. B. Picquct. e May 10 91 j fj° James Harper and W illiam i. It nkin, or either of hem are fully authorised i .’cl us my attornie.s, during my absence from tlna • c ty. 1 Win. Henry Egan, - M'iv 10 h 91 — "■ —T e 'lMll'i midci'signed lias on ha nl at Ins M I , and A willd I:v*.-r there, or i i Amriis'.a, to order.— • CYPRESS LUMBER, </ 7 _ !nr Pannel doors and windows, door and window Sills Sashes, Blinds, Gorin hing, M aildi gs, 1 Boats, F llan, frr. The qnalily of tins limb ■ when dry, is as light and snf as the Nor'hem while Fine, and more s'rong aid durable Hi n Cedar. Persons hui ding wou I do we)! to avad themselves of Hiis description of Luo Iyer, as lh* use of It will do away the necessity ol occasional J. repairs. 1 Walter Harris, ]’ May 10 3l 91 5 N ot ice. s 4 LI. persons an? cautioned against trading for - Cm. a cer'ain note.of hand, given by the subsets y her to U, bert Luiiday and Itoberi It*■ v 111 ofScii j ven Count' 1 , i*i ih s State, for 'hr*e Inmdred and fitly dollars, if.ted on the llHidav of January ® 1325, and due the I t day < f January n x*,, 1 U am deter” ined noi m pay Hie said note unles e compelled by Uw, as the sane was obtained for e unsound proper! i. and als'i for property to which e the said Lundy and Bevill had, as I have pond r. a sons to believe, no just right or title, so that no consideialion lor tlie said note has ever been given, Christopher Sn •!!. K. Kmamtel (County, April li, 1 .15. Ol* 91 ! I N otice. Aid. persons indebted to (he estate of Colton Merritt, deceased, are reqiiested to lender h their accounts ill properly aucsted, wiHlin tlu ;j me prescribed by law, and those indt bted ti sai*l e-tate will mike inmedia’* payment to Comfort Merritt, Jhimv'x. a liurke Cor>nly May 3. 182.5 lit *r 91 IS oticc. 1 Id, persons hsv.np demands rgainst (he er * ia'c oV. /■• A 1..*-'fit, laic oi Burke (,'oiin * 11. d. ceased, are re a .<• c■ in pre>eut then, le “jgaily ieatt-d, *1 *h. • indi hied, in make imrne . I ■uy.e pay o-ent I*. Jo'iatll 111 Lew in, ) Adm'r. . a,l,i . f a ILis’iia Morrison, \ hw* mm. M v 2 18.. > 7 1 -r 9} V>vj *,u w.siV 3ob PrVntiug, Neatly Ro.emLe.il at tiim ((/ire. BAtifclXiiAT AUCTIOX By Bugg & Savage. { / J/i i/) 11 , at 11 o’clock, VVII I, !(B MIU), A ' St, ano in>.n &. I tarzAis’s Ware House, for *• accmiii of the underwriters and all con cern' 1 about Viftcea Cotton Bag irltiK, saved from the wreck of the Steam Host !I nry Shultz—a (|< lartli y oot damsgfd. C 'NiHTums— \|| stuns u> der gIOQ, Cash •a --b vs that amount, a proved endorsed notes,’at tx months. N. R. Owners o'' W orn.Houses will find it to ,n otiend this sale, as „ quantity of 1111 a, ds u-etul m their establishments maybe tv light low, J 1,1 1. 91 . Ai’YJ^UUK, TttlS DAY. at to o’clock, '•5 B. VVCQVtsT, 1 I the subscribers Store, wll be sot at Ven • ». due, lus entire stock in trade, consisting of a Central a ssortment nf Household and Kitoheti Furniture -and a H rse, Saddle and Bridle, Conditions Cash, Christopher Low. May 10 2t 90 J*v mice, WwuVeud, »N*o, \ A INVIUKM) of Six Hollars per share, has f 1 be ,V‘ ’"■ (l,d rt>d ' "" the profus of the wain-Boat Company, for the last four months, i l»*Vsble on the first Monday in June next, to the Mock Holders nr their muhor.sed Agents, at the Steam Boat olKce, Suva nah. VVra. P. Hunter, _ Treasurer S //. C. Srrrannah. March 2, 1825 gg F m SAtaE. Lbs. B.VCOX COoYSJSTJJYG OF H A vt S, MIHDLINGS and StiOULHLHS, „ W. Mackie. M *y 3t 9o iceljukam; •/Vo. 288, Jiroud-Slnet. -pilK Ladies and Gentlemen of Augusta are M. informed that the suhscr b. rs have on hand every Evening, from 4 to 8 ~’cl r.k, l>. M a sun, ■•‘V " f I™ OHEAMS, nf vat 1014 b k nils, h.tmies can be sup, lied by <e, ding anytime • iitiin the abovementi.uied hour . Baniel Dill, & Co. M "y 6 9d Admiuislrator's scale. dih be sold on the In a t ues.fay in August next, *t liie Cuurt.Hou.e, in WaynenborougiL by or dt rof Honorable the Court of Orclmarv : Heveu > egroes, viz: Monday, • tut, farad, L. g K , leory, Juu rnul Arc/i, b 1 ~.g-lo lo the estate of Gotten Merrill, deceased. i uni to be soft) tor the bent (it of the heirs and creditors o t said •eoensed. t om fort v. erritt, Jidm’rx. Burke Coatuy v| .y Jjpu J Iji -|. 9t Ad.mm Iruior’s oale. Will be si.ld a Lite ia.t; residence of .folio B. Morrison, late of Bui lie County, deceased, on the id n day ol June next, A stuck of Horses, Cattle ami ■Sheep, and sundry olnei at holes too tedious to mention. Sale to continue J'r.m day to day until all is sold. Jlosina Morrison, Jldniv’x, (CT All persons ittdi b'ed to (he said estate, are r<q es.ed to make mine dime payment, and those having d; ifunds, are requested to present them ■egally attesttd. R. M. Admr’x. Mav 2, 1825 7t t 91 GKO K(ilA, Lurk a County. I By (he H-m. the Court of Ordinary of said County. TO ALL WHOM IT MAY COSSKUN. WHEREAS Abrtham Uanfonh in right of his w'tje, and Augustus If. Anderson, ad, ministru its on 'be esmte pf Elisha Anderson, deceased, have applied to smd Court fur letters I Immistui y. Now therf fore, these are to cite and admon i ish till anct singular tin* kiin'reil and creditors of 'he an d deci am tl to file Hi. ir tjbji clions (if any 'hey li*ve) m the ■ dii <• ol the clerk of tliis Conti, on or before t,|te ft st M .inlay m January next, otherwise letters d.sons ory will be granted. Vt it ness the ilnnorahle James Torrance, one of the Justic S of s.nd Court, this “lb day of Match, 1825. tx Samuel Sturges, Clerk of hie Court of Ordinary. 0 KOlUjilA, liurke County. By the Hon. the ( out lof O dinary of said County, TO At L Will M IT fit A V COMIIIKN. WHEREAS Jnn: >; Andeison, Executor of the Estate of E,lndia Auder.on, deceased, and its I osiunit ili ly Guardian of \ rginia C. Antler on, hub applied In said Court tor letters Hisntis ory. Now then (ore, lhe«e are to rite and admonish •ill and sir.gi lar the 1-inert (I iintl Creditor* of tJ ie ••ul (‘ celist'd, 'o file their i l'jeclions (if any they .*v ■) i.. the i Hice of the cViit of this Court, on or hi into the first Monday in January next, other •visi Itiitts diso.issory wi'! he granted. Witness the Honoraldf' James Torrance, one of the Justice- of Paid Court, this 2d Mav, lt2i Gin Hamuel Murgcs, i'lerk of the t. ntiri of Ordinal vi