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f
snrrificc their individual interests, and. with-'
out attemptin'; to load, go wit.’: the people.”
On the eve of the Pre-identpil election,
the venerable Charles Carroll of Carrollton,
remarked : “ I have not voted af an election
in the last twenty-six years ; but 1 will go to
the polls and give my vote for Gen, .Tack-
son : we ‘ the people ’ have chipseo but o<>c
President, and that wgs General > Vash'n er-
fon.-. All h?s successors Jfave been made
by the politicians. Now they are so much
divided among themselves, that T think ice
have a chance of electing a man who will
bo the President of the nation, and not of a
party.”
The will of the ncoole was, however, then
disregarded by "Mr. TT.y, who made Mr.
Ada ms President. If we are true ourselves,
at the next election, this political gambler
will not have an opportunity to play the same
game again.
ONE OF THE PEOPLE.
of declaration of wajvtJiej^oroceeded to flft-
tual hostilities. \ quantity of powder was
nlaeed under the tutor’s chair with a train
leading to it and while he was hearing their
lessons, the train was set on fire, and tiie
gentleman, suddenly enveloped in flame and
smoke, fled for his life. Soon after, the
chapel bell, which had so long annoyed
these young worthies by its importunate
summons to prayers and recitations, was
taken down, and il is supposed thrown into
♦be r.ver. A variety of other pranks were
nlaved, hnt vigilant inquiries being set on
fhot to discover the ringleaders in these dis
turbances, th ee of them have been sent
away and the rema nder are beginning to
be satisfied.—N. 5~. Ere.. Po3t.
FROM THE PORTSMOUTH (VA.1 PAX-LAUIUM, MAT 24.„
Marine Lis!— ' rrived at this port ves-
A Philadelphia pauer, of the 17th ult.
says, the theatre closed on Saturday even
ing, after the company played 135 n ghts.
■^be ^ross receipts of the entire season, ben-
pfii« nnd aft are estimated at about seventy
thousand dollars, of which from fifteen to
seventeen thousand dollars, it is believed
trrday, the Richmond. Packet Enquirer accrued to the Manager, as clear profit. 5h
C’apt. I'itcbio, in three days from Richmond, nrosoerous a campaign has not been realized
with valuable cargo of Po ! (cal Intelligence, for the last twenty years. Mr. Macready
There has been a dread fid hurricane in Pr>- cleared nearly 8000 dollars in hi-- two trips
Utica! Ban—and much damage has been Miss Kelley rather more than 9000.
foul of bv the schooner
of Washington, in Mn
sustained by the shipping. Thfc schooner
Intelligencer, Gales, seen skvddh>e-
before the vied hut the Gale blew
so tremendously, she was obliged to jibe.
and set in' for a northern port. The mate
of the Intelligencer (Mr. S^alon.l was swept
overboard off Johnsons Island, in attempt
ing to make ?ovrdin r s ; be - fortunately
however, picked ur* bv Q m b>oat
Equivocation. The Intefgc »s run!
? eft'p-raph Green,
arch last- and was]
obliged to di-charge part offer Pnrco v t i h |
was generously token on hoard the Tele
graph. The Trlegranh spoke a dav or two
previously the schooner J-urnak Eorce. in
a leaky condition, having been considerably
damaged in endeavourin'' to «et over the
Tactic Shoals! The TelncHoh also re
ported that she spoke ti e brig G
olT, ‘‘Opposition” Inlet, having on board
Messrs. \ an Enron and Gambreling, pas
sengers, from a voyage of discovery—all
well—they reported the Ship Crawford, as
being still lying in Private harbor, unsea-
toorfhy.
“ The Enquirer spoke, off Point Lon!'
Out, bound to no Point, the clipper-built
Privateer, John Fa dr>Jr>h.—She had lost
her main boom off Twer’s Island, and had
been literally blown “ sky-hi. *u’I She was
in the act of being towed into Port Char iotf*
•bv the schooner r Se!f-Pr 'serration. Gantairi
Crump, to repair da™ a n cs. The Ship 0«r -
hojtn, was sejan off “ lateral Construction
Point, with a Mix'd cargo—experienced a
tremendous blow near the 7?in R n ps, -hut
succeeded in getting safe into Jackson Har
bor—she is waiting orders to proceed on
her voyage.
“ The Enavirer also reports that on the
, she spoke his Puritanical Majcsbrs
Hermaphrodite Brio: Combination, Admiral! Mrr)fl
Clay, commanding—with his Maiestv and |j
all the Royal Family on board bound to j
Port Presidency, originally from Panama—
she had experienced a continual succmsjon
Southern icinds since she left Port and wa»
obliged to put into one of the “ ^ritb h
lonial ports” to provision. F
lamentable Condition, having lost her red
der, and was completely at the mercy o*’*he | ^
wind and waves—the crew was in a muti
nous state, and she was constantly anc.ov-
cd by the Gun Boats along the coast. The
Captain of the Enquirer thinks she will
never get into Port, as she (having W<t
Canada.—The crime of burglary is pun
ished with death in Ganada. The Quebec
Mercury gives the following novel vet pain
ful account o** an execution, for robbing the
house of a Curate :
On Ttie«dav forenoon. Jean Baptiste and
Michel' Monarquc, brothers, were taken
from the tail, escorted by large parties
of the 71st and 79th regiments, to be
executed at Point Levi, for the robberv
af the parsonage house of that pa i -h. The
pri oners followed on foot, their coffins
nlq^ed in carts, each having a halter round
bis neck. In this way, both collected, and
even playful, they passed along St. Anne
street, the Upper Town Market-place, and
Mountain-street, to Hunt’s wharf, embarked
on hoard the Chambly steam-boat, and
crossing to the Lauzon wharf, continued
from there to walk on foot to the place of
execution, a distance of two miles. Arrived
at the gallows, both ascended it, confessed
their guilt, went through devotions, assisted
by the Rev- M. AT. Anbry and Yiau. The
younger brother, Michel, then learned his
pardon, hade adieu to his brother, telling
him to die like a man. and stood a witness
of the execution. In doing this the execu
tinner had not tied the knot well, and itslin-
ned : the culprit, lacerated hy the rope, fell
to the ground ; he distinctly asked for his
pardon, which, of course, no person had au
thority to grant. He ascended the gallows
anew* the halter v was again misplaced: the?
knot clime under jthe ciilprit's chin: he long
struggled in agony : the executioner seized
bia fiapt and ouHed? them..down whi’e his as
sistant turned the rope on his peck.
^he brother, after witnessing this scene,
walked hack to town, and, in a 9tate of dis
traction parsed through the streets, re-
ching heaven that it had preserved hie;
Such, at least are the facts which We have
he°n aHe to collect, and which we believe
true. After fateh a scene we might ask—
what are the effects of our executions $
\ They/are bill, we may sav, of disastrous
ho ' vn " ,n a 5 evils.
jjpV
port the Irovernmenlof which His
- as laid the corner stone:
We arf'tio^-nWe to fulfil thffitromisb hold
out fa the beginning of this •‘tSlfTate
as 12 o’clock last night nothin^tvas^settled.
'fhe ncgociation ; however, is not at an end.
Lord Lansdown had not returned to t<1wn
last night; but the Duke of Devonshire
made that kind of communication to Mr.
Canning which was considered as leaving
the question still open. Lord Holland,
Lord Carlisle, and * 7 r. Brougham were at
Devonshire-house with the Duke after his
return from Mr. Canning, but no final reso
lution was adopted.
A demand for British goods has sprung
up in India, to an extent which was not ex
pected—while the American and Continen
tal markets have been glutted for such a
length of time.—This growing trade will no
doubt be viewed with interest by our home
manufacturers, and the onlv matter of sur
prise is, that with our decided superiority in
machinery, and the perfection attained ip
the various processes of dyeing and bleach
ing, opr unrivalled muslins and prints have
not superseded the exportation of yarm
Glasgow Chronicle. '
Numbers of the people continue to emi
grate. On Wednesday, a vessel sailed
from the Clyde, filled with emigrants for
British America; another vessel is to sail
in the beg nning of the week for the same
destination. A vessel also sailed on Tues
day from Ayr, with emigrants. A number
of the passengers consist of experienced
agriculturists, and mechanics of all trades.—
Glasgow Journal.
The population of the city of Paris had
been for some days in a fever of joy and
exultation in consequence of the withdrawal
of the project law on the liberty o r the Press.
One reason assigned for the determination
position impregnable—hut alas! for the
of the French government to give up this short-sightedness of the race, instinct, scan-] pupils may wi%
impolitic measure, was the appointment of dalized, instinct, has sapped the foundation,! pupils who wish
and it has fallen as the baseless fabric of a. lated in the art.—-From the insii
vision, never to rise again. In memory, ] of the shoulder, through the
the byate is his superior—in reason, his sinuation, &c. to the lie direct,]
equal-mental endowments form not his tions shall be ample, so as
by n late edict call
t/nder penalties, to
[We_ have a suspicion of the originality of this piece,
though lhs so destitute of evidence,- that we will
pot act oii it.J * - r
Vba THE AXEMAN’.
- TO MISS M W- h ■ -V
0 thou, whose love inspiring air '•’**
Delights, yet gives a thousand tvoeS;
My day declines in dark despair,
And night hath lost her Sweet repose.
Yet who, alas! like me was blest,
To others ’ere thy charms were known,
When fancy told my raptured breast,’
■riSfl'
That M-
sinfk-d on me alone.
Nvmph of my soul, forgive my sighs,
Forzive the jealous fires I fee! y-
Nor hlamc the trembling wretch who diesf,
When others to thy beauty kneel.
Lo, theirs is every winning art,
With fortune’s gifts—unknown to me;
1 only hoast a simple heart,
In love with innocence and thee.
ANDIV ALLAH.
TO THE EDITOR OF THE ATHENIAN :
Sir: Attracted to this village by its re
putation abroad. I have come as a transient
inhabitant to enjoy as many of its privileges
as I can—at the same time, it is my wish to
do what all men should attempt, to impart
some benefits in return for those which 1
may reap. I wish to add my public mite to
the vast treasury of its endowments, and to
leave behind me, when I shall wing my flight
Jjotn it, some memento that I was.
Naturalists have long disputed, and the
wordy war yet rag£s on the subject, What
are the distinguishing characteristics of our
race ? What is the impassable Rubicon on
the banks of which man may proudly stand,
and with the imperious tone of indisputable
superiority, say to created nature, “thus
jar shalt thou come, and no farther.” Some
have laid the source'of this nc plus ultra
stream in the mental powers, and with this,
as their pround fortress have deemed their
social qualifications! What a universal lr
passport to the confidence and intimacy of.
all! But still the happiest display of ta
lent is yet-to be acquired : as yet, we are
only taught. The great acquisition to make,
is to be able, if a savage half civilized L-eing,
not up to the bon ton delicacies of. the day,
demand your authority for your friendly *
notice of him, to ward his enquiries off with
grace—hie labor ! hie opus est! Tins cli
max of instruction will be imparted and gen
tlemen and ladies will be taught to lie, di
rectly or indirectly, rectangularly or obli
quely, with the utmost grace imaginable, so
as to prove it all ialse, or that all thev may
have said arose from the most fervent at
tachment, the most ardent love, in fine a
devotion without bounds. To do this and
to “ damn with faint praise ” in the most
effectual way constitutes tho “ ne plus ultra'*
of the human mind.
I will conclude this by a logical demon- .
stration of the importance and glorv of the
science I profess, and will then conclude by
requesting an insertion of mv proposals.
To develop and improve to their highest
perfection, all the attributes of our natu.xj
and the faculties of our mind ik the cTorinUa^
duty we owe to ourselves and our neigh
bours ; and our highest privilege to slander
others, is an attribute of our nature and a
faculty of our mind.
Ergo—to develop this attribute, and im
prove it to its highest perfection, is a gloriopg
duty, and our highest privilege<
Q. E. D.
JO THE ATHENIANS. . i
Not derogating from the characb£ of
your name, and being lovers of novejfy fa
you. t. the undersigned, make knowp that
1 will, deliver lectures on the pntifoimd
science and genteel accomplishmentqf slan
der at such times as the majority ‘ bf- the
»ls may wish.' I will also take, private
life
V ‘ 4#^
Air. Ganning to be Prime Minister of Eng
land : an event which is said to have pro
duced the most powerful sensations both
upon the neonle and government of France
The night after the rejection of .the-law, the
city, of Paris was enveloped in an almost; '-h
noon-day brilliancy. The streets were fiUeif fll
with immense crowds, and traversed by
cessions of two or three hundred individual)
with torches in their hands, bearing flag^.
and singing triumphal songs. From tim
to time, astounding cries of VrveJe Tloi—
Vive 1e Chambre des Pairs—Vive la Liberti ■
de la Press, were sent forth and answered
hy waving of flags and handkerchiefs from
the well filled windows. In the Pue Ft.
Dennis and Rue St. Honore, iri consequence
of ?he imprudence of the populace, in letting
off fireworks, discharging pistols, &c. the
gen d’armes -charged upon the crowd,
, swords in h an( h and at full gallop—many
were wounded, trampled under foot and
bruised—one woman was killed-
also take, private
ish to be thoroughly matricu-
i»f iTT k/a«\a fix a JtJkbin |.| 10,
characteristic distinction.
♦v.rtuLt have said, man was a talking ani-
m-
instruo-
hikbie any
* Winter,
nes. in t ie
to an exalted standing in the scroll of chit- in*
charterv.
Again, man has been sided a bearded ani
mal—but alas! for the glory of the race
th s venerable appendage of wisdom is ar
rogated by the monkey and the goat, and L it qecessary,
I v.i »: shewn from most distinguished chafacterii
Frankfort, April 16.—Goli Lang, of the
Austrian regiment of Hussars, Frederick
William, having been insulted by Prince
Schwartzenburg, eldest son of the iate
Field-Marshal of that name, a Captain in
the-same regiment they foaght a duel with
pistols 4n Hoguarcd: the'*Princp Was killed
on the spofc v
Feb. 27.—The British Ad-
rmraf, had the American fommo-
- taken but of the Bra
zilian srmadrbn at Monte Video, all the Bri
tish and Vmerican seamen who may have
been impressed, or whose time of service
however envious of thecomoanionable quali
ties of the former, even the dandy wishes
not “ olere liircum."
Another school of Natural Philosophers,
at the head of whom, if we have not been
misinformed, stands the distinguished head
of a neighbouring institution, have laid down
this distinctive rule, that man is not only
“ barbatus, ssd tonsorius." This seems at
first sight to bo definitive, but the mimic pro f„„ n dmm,nr for the to,, of. Meshed moot
e k : ng of Prussia
upon nil bis subjects, .. .
send t!ic r children lo school at a certain ^* as P*P' r cd. This is a severe blow to the
age?—and the Ni**g Fnrd-n a. bv an odict t They have t.aus lost 135 Eng-
n r nea , ‘ 1 v the same date, forbids all nfirsons,' and about 50 North Americans.
" bo do not nassess a oertarn annual income,
fmgi arf^ndin'
bis k npdom.
*
the literary institutions of
FOREIGN.
India Fngar apd Molasses on hoard' will
be ordered off under the “ Non*Intercourse
Act."
11 The Enquirer also saw-, on the 3d May,
a small tore boat, which, it was understood,
hnd sailed on the 1st, (it being her first v< y-
age,) with “ Democracypainted on her By an arrival at Charleston, S. C. En-
stern, supposed to be the “ Palladium” of jjlish papers to the 24th April are received,
Portsmouth, but could not ascertain her ard the following, among other items, are
destination.” j given n the papers of that city.
Marine I ird Corrected.—The Shin f'rarr- j “It does not appear from the papers Hint
ford is not umcarrorthy, as reported above : the succession to the Gabinet had heen de
but is rapidly reftPns: for sen. and is ex-j finitivcly settled, and Mr. Canning is said to
pected to sail in a few days for Senate liar- j have experienced much difficulty and em-
6om* in as gallant a trim as when she first. barrnssment in completing it—hut Captain
came out of the hands of the builder. She I AR rrill, who did not leave the Downs until
has as noble a bearing as any vessel nfloat
and carries the heaviest motel.—The cliopcr-
built vessel John Randolph, from B oan«>ke, *s
sound in aft her timbers, she has been fre- h-
tigged in a new and excellent navyynvd and,
by architects who know from experience
how admirably fit she is for sc - ice. Fhe is
destined ( vith the blessing of God!) to
Congress harbour in the District of Colum
bia. Captain Crump is appointed hv bis
respectable Oirirers to a new and honourable
command for his manly and-praiseworthy
conduct.
It was upon application of the seamen, and
after-due inquiry, that the above proceedings
took place.
The Athenian.
Hamburg was sold on the 4th inst. by the
Sheriff of Edgefield District, F. Carolina,
to Air. Henry Shultz, its enterprising Foun
der, for the sum of Fifty-five 1 housand
Dollars.-—Geo. Courier.
\pril ‘’flth, informs us that the new Minis
try bad been formed previous to his sailing,
and that the Marquis of Lansdown’s accept-
nnu.e of p olaee in <t, bad the effect to cause
an immediate rise in the funds.— A London
paper epeaks thus :—“ It is not impossible
but that before this paper goes to press, we
may he aide to announce some termination
or other to the negociations which are now
earwing on between Air. Canning and the
Whigs. When we use the word negocia-
♦ion. however, we must not be misunder
stood as implying that the Whigs are anxious
to make terms for themselves. The con
trary appears to he the fact. They are
willing to "ire their support to a liberal sys
tern of policy ; hut the promulgator of that
system wishes to engage them in it, not as
approvers only and promoters, but as co-
operators. If there has been any avidity of
place, an arrangement might have been con
cluded long ago ; hnt. according to Sterne’s
proverb. “ liberality offers with both hands
open, what modesty will scarcely touch with
a finger.” Air. Brougham, for example,
has taken a decided part in promoting the
negociation, by which the Whigs Were to
come in declining at the same time., for
rea- onMo he hereafter explained , any office
himself.
A s for T ord Lansdown, it is pretty evi
dent that he has shown no grea* appetite for
place Lord Holland bad expressly refused
: t and others are equally averse: whilst there
College Frolics.---At Bowdoin College,
in the F*ate of Alaine, the students have
lately shown themselves somewhat refrac
tory to the discipline of the place. One of
their number was suspended eight or ten
days for some offence, and his class finding
the sentence not to agree with their view’s
of the justice of the case, resolved to do
something really worthy of punishment.
Their first demonstration of a riotous dis
position was made by procuring n barrel of
tar, to which they set fire in the night near
the college buildings, and danced round it
yelling like savages. After th s ceremony. 1
which seems to have been intended as a kind exists in all, the warmest disposition to sap* l abroad,
society to passAhc long eve
and perforce the short summer
pfirrot, the magpie, and alter* pos- j most agreeable- manner pfo^sibl<aX; s The old
‘“^Han voice ; and the monkey can j shall be taught to tarnish In toe jbiuripletest
rivals in
icandal
prao
tcandchnn
ost desery-
weeks.
Is of the first
engaged—
to this
hopefto rival him, however earnest
struggles be to do so, and however
school himself in order to acquire this Jrig,
timuble qualification that shall (in his*opi- **
nion and who to judge more fit) entitle him
tice, and diplomas of
magnatumfwW) be giyeti $
Mgjtt the end of e»oh terin
g—Half' * all the pro 1
caa the pupil may
'*$»4
r» *hdnour'beibg pie
;t .w plac^-v • ; ' : -ME”
r \re*ide,ak- g" ia „ Prp ; »
While remembered by many whoae chief inotiv
is to add interest to our labours, wc consider the ob
ligation as cancelled only by insertion, when our taste
is in unison with the w iter’s.—To one whose piece
would be inapplicable at any other time, we can only
sav, that had iucfuiab'en been consulted, it would
have been admitted—numerous causes conspired to
prevent it.—To another equally desirous, owing to
circumstances, we would remark, that the ensuing
week will, in our opinion do as well: should he con
cur in opinion with us, it will be attended to.
If ‘ X ’ has failed to make the disCovery-that * The
Dying Chirp is not original with hint, \ve shall find
a recompenceforour trouble of informing him, in the
gratification of publicly retailing the.- secret. If he
will appear in his own character with the shme
claim to distinction winch this ‘piece possesses, We
will give his production a place most cheerfully.
The ofFe-ing of our lean pencil friend, appears in
an inappropriate garb. The manuscript, in addition
to being too dim for the compositor’s use, requires
the hand of correction, or, what is mare difficult, the
3kill of the lexicographer.—We have not time or in
clination for either. '
Some of the communications of our neglected cor
respondents of last week, were then reserved for fur
ther consideration. The same necessity for their
publicati.- -i not existing now, they are added as ano
ther legacy to our devil's inheritance. Those upon
the same subject subsequently received, are doomed
to a like service.—The opportunely appropriate and
judicious remarks delivered from the pulpit on sab
bath last, heard by the most, if not all of our town
rcade s, the importance of which, the practical wis
dom of age, the advantages of experience, and the
scrutiny of observation have alike Confirmed, will
stand as landmarks of discretion |o tfii timid essayist,
and lie remembered as a portentous omen of what might
follow, by the bold adventurers.
We cannot withhold an expression of pleasure in
finding that a systematic engraft of lectures, embra
cing a science So essential to the spirit and dimity
of the age and place, as that recommended by pro.
fessor Mendax, to say nothing of its moral influence
and utilit*. is about to bo commenced. The numer
ous certilc*tes accompanying bis proposals, from
the ftonouftifmd highly este'emed pupils of his schools
i deferred fox the want of room.
in the fashionable' arid .scandalous world* V
Airs. Scandal, Killtime, Lovelie Tattle, j.
and Alessrs. Backbiter, Pulldown, Syco
phant, Envioso, &c.
FRANKLIN SUPERIOR COURTf*
(ADJOURNED TERM.) '
THE Members of the Bar of the Western Circuit
having convened for the purpose of expressing f heir
tribe of the forest will shave ; ef sic transit j bero f the profession in the’death of the Honourable
gloria homints . j John M. Dooly, Wm. H. Underwood was called to
Now, Sir, It has always appeared to me j the Chair, and Samuel A. Wales appointed Secretary
short-sighted in these learned men, that, ab- j —when the following Preamble. -Snd Resolutions
sorbed in their own hypotheses, they have were presented and unanimously adopted:
been unable to pierce through the mist tliat S The Member^ of the Bar of the Western Circuit
surrounded them, and to let in the rays of ; having met to deplore the afflictive dispensation 0 f
truth and light. To do this and seize that! Divide? Providence in the sndden death of the
lofty Stand which they have missed, is now j Honourable Johs M. Dooly ; and lamenting the lose
my aim, and I know that I shall emblazon | which the profession, his friends, his family, and the
my name upon -J public have thereby sustained, would join their 1 fej-
“ That steep where fame’s proud temple shines afar.” ; l°w-citizens in a sincere expression of their high rft-
To cultivate all the powers of mind, and *t’-' , for hh memory mcT char.cter.-In him w.
develop their full extent, and consequently ! 1 '" P ^ a " d b f ,CT « »»»
raise them to that perfection of which they ? n '7*rZM *(.T “ ^
, •. , • . , J • honour to our profession—the stench, one of its bright*
are susceptible, is not only pra.sewOrthy, j est luminarie s, and Georgia, one of her greatest and
but at the same time, a duty. In doing this most distin?ni ’ 8hed sons /
I shall not only prove my philanthropy, but j Tt is tkerefore resohedj T h at in roncCTt ^ our
gam a name. 1 lay it dow n as the grand fellow-citizens, wc deeply lament the loss our State
difference between man and bis .eliow-ani- ; has sustained in the death'of the Honourable John
M. Dooly.
mals, that he is a slander-loving being. In
all his other endowments they may emulate,
equal, nay. exceed him; in this he is unap
proachable. It has been astonishing to me
that this village, so estimable in other re
spects, so distinguished in all noble privi
leges, should have made no progress in thir-
glorious and commendable art; that she
should be surpassed hy all of her petty
younger sisters.—Go to them, and what a
treat is offered to and accepted by the in
quisitive and knowledge-seeking mind—
there it may breakfast, dine, sup—nay, sleep
upon a bed of roses upon the character of a
friend.—Here it is a fast, more rigid and
dreadful thap even the Jewish Lent or the
Turkish Ramadan. To do away this blot
upon the moral escutcheon of this village,
to give it a place among its sister towns,
and above all. to enhance the' character of
its inhabitants in the scale of civilization is
most desirable, and must give its benefactor
(in this respect) a high niche in its records.
Professing myself a perfect adept in this
most estimable science, I engage to operate
a thorough changA in the population in a
very few weeks. I profess to instruct old
Beeolvedi That we will wear the usual badge of
mourning for sixty days as a testimony of our respect
and esteem for his memory, and that otir Absent
brethren he respectfully requested to do the same.
Resolved, That the foregoing Preamble and Reso
lutions be published in the Augusta Chronicle and-
Athcnian, anil that, a copy thereof be transmitted to
Mrs. Dooly, the widow of the deceased. i "**'
W M. H. UNDERWOOD, Chairman.
Samuel A. IVales, Secretary.
The other papers in Georgia are requested
to publish the foregoing.
S. A* WALES, Secretary.
On viewing our meagre parade of new ad
vertisements this week, it half tempts us to ea^t
envious glance on the burdened Sheet of a rao-c fa
voured neighbour; and considering they are the vesy
sinews of snrh establishments, we have, bosun to
think favourably of the plan used by a wight of our
order in Petm.sylvania, who inserted “ .Wtenisp.
meats much w mted at this o/Jice /” But certai r dv we
should be .glad to Serve double the number of SVieRds
in that line, on terms as liberal as any jjjjjW fCntjft,
and we doubt not wnth as much or more ad
to their object in publishing them. L
CAUTION,
H AVING lately had in. my einj
Stage-driver, one Augustus
tr-
and young; male and female; coquet and 1 tound it necessary to dismiss forfri'
pit; dandy and prude, in all the various de
lightful modes of passing time by detracting
from character—to enable them to draw the
means of amusement for an idle hour in
slander, open and concealed, sly and‘bold,
daring and insidious; to" insinuate in the
most friendly and delicate way the frailties
of a beloved friend; fa bewail over her errors
in that happy private manner, that shall
blast beyond recovery^'iH short.to serve up
a festival of character that shall delight all
palates. When this dggfae is attained,
what an advance we hate made in civil and
. Ah..-
ticea, and having since found th. m*t'
extensive than 1 had imagined, I d
put the public on their guard agi
about six feet high, rawboned, da
what swarthy complexion, and forvri
in his manner.
' JO
Athens, June 15. r
NOTICE. ^
F OUR months after date, a;
made to the honourable .
Clark CoOnty, when sitting for o:
for leaye to sell the Real Estate <
deceased.
i THOMPSON H
J ‘