Georgian for the country. (Savannah, Ga.) 182?-1822, September 26, 1822, Image 3

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4 Film i/n Jefmta CAfWtV tail Oetr/it JJ. ti'HIKT tUCVlKW, Of Sermons, by lb,. luc Hw Bollock, D. D. [cOSTINVKD.] An artist wim foul produced many till- llncni-hcd pieces, wholly from the re r uicrs of hia own mind, hut hhd lean «**«>■* »f the performance* ol other ma* ten, »■■ observed lo brighten with ■ end den tran*pait,«l joy on witnessing » sin- (tie • H'»rt ol in acknowledged genius. •• Now," mid he,» I know that 1 nm ■ E nin er," The joy of thi* discovery may . e imagined when At reflect that he wsa ilia moment able to appropriate to him- •elf the admiration and tpplause which had been conferred on a tirmher artiat, and to identify hit own claim* and cha racier in the production* of one whose pencil had already given him diatinctinn and wealth. Such, we think, ia frequent ly the case with the Christian. The scenes 41' a new world are unfolded to hit view, • ml tjjo movement* of a auipriaingatrug gle are felt within him j within him too, there ia a change which aeema like " the dividing asunder of soul and spirit" and of the joints and marrow.” His eyes were previously so blind that he could see nothing in the whole field of vision before him, "So thick a drop serene had quench’d their orb* Or dim intrusion veiled,"— But nnw he can " are men, like facet, walking,” and by a wonderful faculty of ;ituro*pectian can tec himself in a charac ter which auppltcsno reason for sell com placency. The aling of keen remorse pierces the very seat of sensation in lii» ..soul, and gives him the nnmixed pain of • wounded spirit. Mercy, however, of fers it* lenitive* and the peace-speaking blood of the Saviour changes anguish in to penitence. Uut, how is he to know by svliat name he shall call this inward agi tation id hit soul ? Is it tile renovation of his fallen nature and the cure of his epinitual malady ? Does it bring his to... cor from the power! of darkness and his translation into a new kingdom ? Is it the return of the exile and (lie deliverance of the cap.ivi ? Is it the re-impression of 0.ill’s image upon a heart which had lost every vestige of the original likeness? No doubt it.is all this, and nn dotibt the ennscience ol the man receives intima tion* of ilia happy change; but the reality ol Ilia own impressions must he ojoudrd with many doubts until he tees in others the operations of which he has been the admiring subject. Hence He learns the value of those writers who leave him the rich-legacy of their personal experience ' ltd imprint a likeness of themselves works of " eminllf a* number of her children (hat * became victims of the sword, of famine, " and ef srdiiitn i when we listen to tire •'•bricks of the bereaved and mark the con " *ul»ive atrugglei nt the dying—it ia not " merely to fill our eyes with tear*, and » our hearts with sorrow for this unhappy " balln«, (hat the picture ia presumed to " us | hut lo shew us the tvnora ol John- •• vah, toe woes which must crush the COMMERCIAL. Cn^hi ol CAarfcM.a, Sr/fl. 53. C.n.iu—The new crop begins to come to market in amall quantities | a lew wagon load. AfUpWnda have sold at 13 J rrma, but 14 eenta ware refused tbr a lor of 37 hairs, wauled for a northern msmifaclory. - The eiop ia said to lie the runs' abundant one ever made nPtlie stale. ----- — - This cirenmatancr, added to accountsfromall '* guilty when the patience of the Loid is |the atate* where cutlon Uraised,of the great " exhausted, and the arm of the living quantities grown this year, must tend to keep " Oml, armed with thundffi is raised a I I'dres down, and it i« probable that the marker ::'^b n „ o ;3 be ow" 0 ^ , :? o ^ Dpi upon the works or their genius al P ,« { e were once present at a conversa tion which furnished us a forcible illustra tion of this subject. A gentleman, who had bern a sn'dier and a statesman was One or thu p'lriiei. In the circle where he movrd'he had on equals either in weight ol chute- ter or in power al intellect. He had acted much in public life and in every lituatiou stood pre-eminent in the dignity of inoflkl worth and in the integrity of auperior talent. Hia mind wisioo high to he influenced by fear, and tob honest 1 ‘ to illusion. ' He had been e co to yield lo illusion. He had been a coin ™ ul w ™' ■ . J"" 1 *. E Unhamcl 4 Ana.. Q Gordon, H lirnilll unbeliever and had .rcgnrded relf" J eat wort a of scripture, or ol holy g Atwood, J Davtnpnrt, JP Wdiianuon, J Koii . -VS " a llaiaimj n atts aaailk tk.a. -l.ax Anil Iricena I la — - ■ s' — -- >•'. ' f ;ion as a ayatem of sullen mystery and mpossible precept*.., But it pleased God to convey a new disposition to his heart - and to give him a just sense of the impor tance nl religion. In thi* frame of mind lie pbtnined nn interview with an aged and venerable minister, whose reputation lor Wiidom, sanctity, and b|Muencc. was not surpassed by any. HeqH^eatcd of the minister to give him thcwlct experience of his own heart, aa far as consciousness cnulil enable him to disclose the operation* of hia own mind. The minister proceeded according to request,-and with clear dia crimina'impnd tender feeling, traced the Worl^of Gi^bdpini hi* amll. He had not closed hia narrative before wc aaw thy cheeks of the veteran bathed with the Ire. quontdropa which stole from hia eyes, and his manly bosom swelling with emotions wliicth could not be suppressed. lliajreply 'wasJ"lton am a Christian.” This sudden , burst of assurance was 'the result ol com parison. Thr moral i^uRC ol one whom he believed to he a Christian, correspond ed with the affections of hi* own spirit, and the persuasion which fie had previ ously enteitainvd waa animated into a confiflence, the jny ol Ahich wasTietrayed by the tear of sympathy. How must we hence learn to appreciate scriptural biography ! It shew* ua reli gion in the contact «f a real visible opera tion ; it ia piety exemplified ; wisdom fitting in judgment upon man's sentiment* and conduct, and appealing to her chil dren for her justification. A large pro portion of the work under consideration It of this class and is executed in a style hiehlV useful and intereating. In this department of aacred troth we did not 1 expect much that was original in matter, cr new in form. We had thought that aqanty gleanings must remain in a field which had been traversed by the elegant fancy nf Hunter, who comes to hia reader ymbalmdO with a rich fragrance of flow ers, fa field where the discriminating mind #f Robinson had largely gathered the pre cious fruits of Christian doctrine. But Dr Kidlock surveya the scene, all the psits of which the eyes of former cri tics had investigsled, and brings up to the view ol his reader many beauties which had not been explored, and awakes re flections which others had left dormant. The u'ility of consultiug the history of God's providence lie exhibit* in the first pan of the first Sermon, which is on the Lite <d Adam. From several pathetic re ference* we select the following as highly finish'd and affecting. “ Wh- n the smoking ruins of Jerusalem we spread before ua. when we bcbuld the " which tnuat at laat overtako those who 11 despite the meant nf grace and the " offers of salvation.”—Vol. 1. Sermon 1. pace 3. None can scrutinize tho design* of Dei ty, nor assign tho reasnna which govern his proceedings. Still wc may furm e ra tional conjecture by the aid ot his own word as to tome of the fin.il causee of hia works. Thus alter the womlera of creation were accomplished and the garniture of stupendous Hravena tens spread forth, the impulse ol nature itself lends ut to expect anu wish an intelligent eye to contain, plate the mighty constitution of the uni- verse. Let us hear Dr. Koltuck on this subject i ." The world had already-been formed by the great Creator. It displayed hia perfections and was replenished with eve ry thing neoelsury for the benefit or fell city of man. Hiit there was yet no ra tional being that inhabited it, to contem plate these works, and .trace in them, with adoring wonder, the wisdom, the goodness end the power of him who made them. Tho sun, the moon and the stars, declared in their courses the glory of Utid, but they did not perceive this gloiy, The earth with its proiloc'ioni shewed thnt its maker was divine j but unendued with intelli gence, it could not recognize the divinity. Man then waa formed to behold this glory In see these tra.es of the Godhead, and on earth to respond to the heavenly hosts, among whom > the morning stars sang together, and the suns ol God shouted fur j"y.”-p. 4. The test by which tho virtue of our rst Parent was tried in Paradise, lias been often assailed by the aueer of the scoffer and the infidel, It has been re presented as ridiculous and absurd, that an alight u dcviu'iuu as was th.it of eating the forbidden fruit, should involve couse quences so momentous, not only to Adam, but to all Ida posterity. Indeed, it ia too much thccustum with men of the world, to amuse themselves with truths of the moat tarred import, and to court the semb lance of wiailom and independence by the boldnuss with which tlu-y impugn the most sacred topics. We often hear • sweeping sentence of condemnation pas sed upon the whole system nf revealed religion, by men who would be deemed incompetant to decide the most obvious question in common prudence, merely bocauso aotuo audacious witling whose impudence far exceeds hU penetration, has been able to turn the laugh of tho pro fane tipim some prominent part of snip lure. Uut it would be wise in such t,o think how dangerous an experiment they make when they laugh at tho dreadful mysteries of God. " lie that makes a 13 to 93 oents /tin 'continues stagnant < no foreign export last week. G oil Kice is held at 3 75 a tope, rinr would bring an eighth mure r common qualities 3 35 s' 3 30—these prices are nearly nominal, the transaction!of thesareek being very tailing, Prim Current nt fTMoytan, Srfl. 14. Cotton Upland It n 131 Corn65 a 751 Coni Ileal glpWce 3 75. Prictt famntal Faipttville, Sept. 19. Cotton 13 a 14( j Flour 871 dice 4 a S i Corn 65 a 70. -Sfm krtt nt Pert no-j-rnice, .7riy. 98. “ Our market at prcient <t very brisk for all aorta ol'aalteit provisions, which bring die quo tations readily. The sale of flour enntinnea dull, although there ia not 1000 barn-la in lirat hanql. , flutter, cheese and hams are in demand i of rice and tobacco our importa have been to > jT' rat for the coniumption, more especially die Our prosper! for a good crop of eoff-e haa, al no time, been more flattering than the present j and should we have no hurricane In destroy it, as the funds in a he bands of Europeans at every limited, and they cannot speculate, we may look for a great rtpdflctiun in prices die cnsuoig sea- ion. Ilcefmrnhbl gl2 t prime Q | eargofli But ter 15 eta i Cheese 251 Flour 10 .110 50 i llama 18 ctt| I .umber, wt-.we pine, 100(1 feet gills pitch pine 301 I'ar hid g4 ; pitch 4i till pen line 41 Twilled Coffee Bagging 18 a 30 i Cof fee lb 33 sous 6 den. a 33 S i Cuttun 14 den. i Doubloons <$1675| l)-illars5pcr Cent prem ” Marketi at Si. Vhomtit, .fof. 31. Sup. Flour gd a i Com M.d 19 a 301 prime beef 5 a 5( j do pork It a 13 , bulter 1 i a 14els I t> P Cumber M gid ; vv l> do U i Corn 90 a 931 Coftl-e, fine greun 34, scare--; Collars 3 a 4 per cent prem t Ex. on U S. 60 days, 3 a 2 j do. There were at St. Thomas 10,000 bbls Flour, and 1O00 puncheons Corn Meal Mai belt a* ,/ux Cuyct.JuJ, 28. Flour was very ata-ce, and a Inndl parcel of 75 hhls. fresh arrival fls*m an eastern purt, aultl at 8II 75 j large 'arrivuli will however imme- iliulely depreciate its. value , small quaniidea will answer. Prime Pork 818 i do llcef 10 a 10( i llama 15 ota; Butter unultable i dice 3j| a 4, dull. J. 4Vi It tll.l. For Ncw.York, The Khooner 8 B A L I 0 N, Tktlm, matter, ,,, wi " potltlvely sail nn Sunday next, hn.ei.i'V Fn i r ot paaaaffc* »PP>y on boaoiai lone-' upper wharf, orlo —~ * «KO, COHDON. Houses and Stoves to Rent. Jama. A number of HOUSES i clif. ■ ;;;] pans of the city, snlflc Ofwlucli ■ ■Mil have store. atiaMied, will be rented al mmmrnp* modente price. Applicant* wilt bear in mind that none but responsible rentora ur good Mcuritiea will be accepted. Apply to aep26 „ 0-^ HAYDEN. ' V. Prime Pork New Mackerel. ©(J) HI* NewOfork city impected prime 50 do new No 3 Mackerel, for sale by . HOBEHT S. GOFF. * aep 36 p Mrs. Limbert B EOS leave to inform her friend* thnt the hnt returned to her former residence in Stiite »tieet, (brick house, fir«t door east of Drayton street) whore ahe will re commence her SemW nary on the flr*f day of Ootobei*. Writing, Orsinmnr, Geography, Embroidery, I’lain Sewing, Mini the minor and useful branches of Education will be taught by her. She tvutta to tlie appmhnt on of those whonia^he pleased to favpr her with their pat roiihge, whichahe resprctfull) solicit*, Mrs I„ can aocomniodale two or three young ladlea with boaiti, and with the use of Ih* Piino» if required- tep 26 l PUBLIC-SALES. By Baker, Minton, ' Tills DAY, 96lk Mltl,at 11 9(i*j* tViWMt, *t 1 \ n'elnck, ./wj(<AWr JurHvn «trr t ’ TIUE 111/lP to/if iu m A large and gehVral aaiimmciiiof GROCERIaS. ai.ao, 100 bit nncrflne FLOUR aep 36 w By J. B. Herbert Co. On SATURDAY S8lhlnat at 41 o’qtitolL If W/ bt hUI at our aurtmv A Wen* ral Aaaortment fit- GROCERIES, &C? AMO, 1000 lbs Rucon “ .♦ 10 half bit Pork, juit landed 26 ; yawndadh Mminittrator'i Bate. * By J. B. Herbert‘s Ccb W On the Jim TVaJify th Ocleter turl, ll.I. be acid before tliecoun Imiise In the city of Savannah, bqMyen thcosu.l boiira a Negro Man named llave, sold a. Jill- nmprr. ty nf Mr. Hamuel Davenport, dec'eaied, bv order ot the administrator. Terms cash, sugfi f L For Sale. A «rj*nl'ty of excellent BALF, HOFF, to be A disposed of on accommodating terms.— Apply to aug3t c accommodating termi.- WM. TAYLOR U SON. Cotton Bagging. Tl TTi(irfcV iuc « B D »"6e'‘ Bigghig, for «-1e by U SJ'iJ \ UUUKUT CAMI’IIEI.L. s Smith, si Nicholas and Neff's Appiy in t 94 .a a J\ few pipe! North, r. ■TlX sale by ""g3l i|j- I S icliolaa and randy. Win and Bundy, for JOHN l*. WILLIAMSON. Notice. w T IIF. suliscr b'er will be absent fl-nm the city fur a short time ( during his absence Mr. hisattorncy. I. MIMS. Sasnsi. Phicbrick will act »Ug20 MARINE INTELLIGENCE. POUT OF S.n'ji.yA'jill AKIIIVEI), Ship Corsair, Porte , N York, 4 days, with a f’dl cargo lo U C Gi-isivnld, owner, Baker It Minton, Hall W Hoyt, 1 Unlien, B HurrmiglukS. r llunnmg, t.kunty _e» ijimliry, .tntimffittri! Hdla, J W Long, J 1* 8etxe 4 co T I) .well, T M Dt gminrd, F Seiliok, Ponce if »l Ki '-xlr, A B Fannin 4 co. tY Scarliruugli, Cantclmi & La mar, J P Force, IV Lippitt if ro, It fj ,t ll.-iu- r. sham, Miller £f Furl, It Campbell, A Niehnlua, C Reliey, J Gumming V Son, Perrj tf Wright, E ltlias 4 co. P Giilett, Pouyat 4 Holland, ,1 sl things, plays with thunder, nntl kisses the mouth uf a cannon just as it belches fire and death.” |A reference to the fatal transaction by wich Adam implicated himself and Ilia posterity in guil* and wretchedness. Dr. K.nllncklias the follow ing satisfactory observations " The teat to our first parents cnulil not be any of those great moral precepts which would answer this purpuse with regard to us.. What moral precept could have been given to Adam for hia trial, and as the condition of the covenant formed with him? He could not be enjoined to honour Ilia parents—he had none; nnr to abstain from murder, aince, even if he had known what death wns, and how to inflict it, this crime could be committed only upon the object of his dearest affec tions, without whom the world would be a solitude to him | the only two of the human race cnuld not violate the mar- fiage bed ; Adam could not steal llurco- vei, because all things belonged to him ; nur could he bear fslsc witness, since there was no motive that cnuld incite him to do it againat the wife nf hia bmuin ; nor for give his enemies—None existed. What moral precept, then, can .you select, pro per to be used a-, a teat of the obedience nf our first parents ? These moral pre cepts they could not violate, and therefore their keeping them would be no teat of virtue.—It was then necessary that the test should be some positive precept, and the more simple and easy thu precept, the move would it display the goodliest of God, and render min inexcusable forjts violation. Whpt then could be more suitable and proper fur our first parents, living in a garden, than the command tn abstain from a particular tree ? Where now are all the impiou9 witticisms ot li bertines nn this lubject i" Should the above extract prove al it til- factory to others as it haa been tn ut they will rejoice to fee the Word of God vin- dicutedjhy the fair exertion of reason, and' the mouth of the iufidel stopped by th'e honest exhibition of truth. - FlDE8- f DIED, In JYilkea county, 10th inst. Charles 9. Ly. man, aged 19 yean. In Augusta l3ih intt. Mrs. Winifred Starnes, aged 28. In Oglethorpe county, 11th init. Mr. Thomas A. Bones, aged 28, merchant of Augusta. On the Sand Hills, 17th mat. Mr. John Clarke, sged 48, a native of Ireland. In Edgi-field District, S. G. 16th inst. Doctor William Howell Hay, agid 27 . At the Warm Spring*, in Virginia, Spencer Uoane, Eaq. one ot the Judge*uf the Court of Appeal. , ' 1 inan, O Taft,.I And- rson, G Mmrell 4 co. Dnu glaasCV Surf el), J Hnngliton, ,1 \! Gtnrk, It Wor rell, T Dowell 4 cn. A & K, Wood, J I’enfleld, T Butler 4 co. and T H Price. Th * Corsair •ailed from N York on Friday evening, and not on Sunday, 15th inat. as before reported. Filer Boat achuuner Ann Maria, Siatuu,Uruuk* lyn, 3) days. ' BELOW’, Ship LucU, Liverpool, 66 daya, bound to Gtiurle.ten, , ansiriH hohAhis »o«T. * At N York 13th init. brig Levant, Beebe, 8 dlya. ci.tATi--. roa this tout, At Boston, 11th inat. brig Monroe, Eldridge- The brig Jon»«, from thi* port for Rotterdam, waa spoke July 37, in 1st 42, lung 49. CHARLESTON, Sept 23-Arrlved, ship Com. Ferry, Brown, N York, 6 daya i ach Auro ra, Hall, Byaton, 11. PHILADELPHIA, Sept tS-Arrived, brigs Alabama, Hall, Havana i Sarah, lllaokiainu, si Eustatin, 17 daya i Hamlet, Harrison, Gharlei- ton, 6. Cleared, brig Pilot, Wing, Gibraltar. NEW-YOMK, Sept 14-Arrived, .hip Favn. rite, Tyler, N Orleans, 20 daya. Sailed in cn. Willi iloop Siuan for Savannah. Brig* Factor, Gray, Havana, 14 days i Com merce, Nickerson. St. Marya, 10 i Washington, Everett, N Orleans, 24. Sept 18—Arrived, ship Phoeion, Duplex, Bordeaux, 60 daya. Below, the British frigate Ipliigenia, Captain Mends, fmm. Jamaica end Havana, with specie Cleared, ihip France! Henrietta, Dickinson, Liverpool. For Baltimore, The tehonnr » MARY II* ANN, Capt. C. Menton, vill nil early neat week. F »r freight ua' punge, appiy tn captain R. on boon!, nr to PONCK U MACKENZIE, Who have for tale, 100 bla Baltimore fipertine freah Flour 75 keg* well aaaorted Nail* ^aep 21 w For Jtent, . Thr Dwelling House of the Ute lllil Thomas Gardner Eiq. dec. Apply to UIU ft. KIUUY. aep 10 b William Scarbrough, H AS fo sale, a tew casks of best. LONDON POWTBR, in pint and quart butUea •epl 19 p Cotton Bagging. fiJ/FV^ieceaCulton H.igg,.,g,f u r tale by l Zs-m J. U. HtllflEBT u co. aep 34 IRON. Tout Swei'gs Iron, Msorttd, landing nnd fur isle by O. TAFT. •e|) 10 b LONDON BOOKS. 8. C* & J. SCHENK |TAVE just received by the lticliark PlaiVet, 11. a collection of London publication*, among whioh are the following\ The wpi ka of the Oritiah Poets. includUta tU# «M)t wm<t.~v4 *.»...NH1v.i.al —a ..ITWlI *** The firm of Jacmqr* WoonsaiDoa. IuiHNmu exiatb g, ia .fo, h,,| wi mutual omiarnt. The buaineuennA.ied loilierh will receive the aUentien of iViiodbndoi £?Du. rand. EHKNKKMR JACKSON, ,lr, THUS. WIODUUIUGB. •ep 3 rp *** The undersigned fiavo umleil their professional Interrlla ta 4lir prac tice of the I AW, and will be found at foe nf. bee recently occupied by JMSkaon 4 W-n-d- bridge. »P THOU. M. WnonBIIIDGO, ALEXIS D. DURAND; \ Notice. E DWABD WILLIAMS ofl'era hia service! to the ti-iends of tho late firm of F,. WII. llama U Co. In the transaction 4f Ctmminun Bit. itinera, at Savannah. a|l ~ g ■'.I To Rent, |g EVERAL convenient and pleatatit Dwelling P ‘ SAMUEL PHILBR1CK. *ug 33 rp WHISKEY. J UST received por aloop Susan, 1*0 barrels Whiskey. For aale nn nerommndathiit lerma by J, U. UEHBEHT 4 CO. up 13 BOARDING. 4 GTpHItEB or four yomiff gentlemen can be ae- -U chnimodnted wilh lioarding and Ltkdgintf in a ruipectable family, irf a eWtral aituatitm* and on the mo't moderate terms. A| ply tn tho Editor of the GionotAR. aug 17 Roman author* 5 by Thomas Park, F 8 A | in 54 volt. A'n Eipoa'dion of the Old and New Te*t*. ment. iud vol* 4to, by Matthew Ifenry, a new edition, edited hy the Rev George Burder and thu Uuv Joseph Hughes, A M , Memoir* of the celebrated peraopp composing the Kit*Cat Club, with a prefatory account ol the origin of (he association, illustrated with 48 portraits from the original paintings, by Sir Godfrey Kiudler, 1 veil 4w> The four of Africa, containing an account of •II the countries hitherto visited bv Europeans, selected from the best iAithnrs,unu arranged by Catherine llultun, 3 veils 8vo Complete Mercantile Guide to the Continent of Europe, forming a complete code.of c»miner cial tnf >rmation, by C W Itordunss, 1 volBvo Le'tcrson the events which hive passed in France since the revolution in 1815, by Helen Mtriu Williams, with a supplement, 1 vol 8vo Bishop Hall's Select Works, containing con< templations on the Old and Nett Testaments, with Ins devotional and practical pieces, with some account of hH life and auiferings, written ,hy luinsctf, in 5 vols 8vo, arrungt d and revised by .1 aia > Pr.itt Works of the Rt. Rev. William Beveridge, 1) 1), Lord Bishop of St Asaph, containing all his Hermans, with a preface giving some sccouutnf Hit* uithor anu his writing*, * new edition in 6 vols 8ve St rmons jelected from the works of the Rev IflN.tc Harrow, I) I). late minister of Trinity Col 1ege, Cambridge, 2 vols 8vo I'ite Hiatory of Religious Liberty from the fi st propagation (if Christianity itt Britain, t< .the deatli of George, the Third, by f Heujamii Brook, 2 vol* 8vo IlHtoryot Intolerance, with observations on the unreagonahleiy'sa and injustice of persecu tion, and on the Equity and wiidom of unre* s'rioted religious liberty, by Thomas Clarke, 1 vol 8vo History of the Jews, from the destruction of Jerusalem to tiic present time, by Hannah Adams, 1 Vid 8to Oriental Customs of Sacred Scriptures, col- letted from the most celebrated Travellers and the most aminmit cr tics, by the Rev Samuel Burder, A M, 6th edition, in 2 vol* 8vo. The India Cabinet Opened, 1 vol Tho Universal Traveller, hv Samuel Prior l.luitratio * "fthc L nu«iu|G ueraoflnaectr, by W Wood, 2 \ola Prudfiice and Principle, a tale by the author of the “Authoress,” lvol Meditations, Practical and Experimental, for every day in the year, by one hundred ut the m at popular minuter^, and oontaioiug ihe out* lines of 366 discourses Classical Dictionary for the use of schools, by 1 homes Bowne, L L D Gospel Truth, by J G Pike A-Summary of Orthodox Belief and Practice, by the Rev John Prowett, A M, 1 vol Memoir* of Mrs Mary Baificld, by 8 Summers Picturesque Piety, 2 vola Sea Re raons, oy the Hev. George Burder Famdiar Dialogues on interesting subjects, by a lady * ‘ Mathematical Principles of Natural Philoso* Sophy, by Sir Isaac Newton, 3 vola 8vo Gilford's Blackstoife j Coote's Lew of Mort gages 1 tloole’a Ariosto 1 Junius ( Pliny's Let ters! Hope’s H <mer ami itliadi Caw per 1 Dry* den'i Virgil • Charles (he 12tn and Peter the Great i Fury Tales 1 Omuui's Poems; Beauties of Snskspeare,Chinese Tales; Spencer's Po em* ; Kite and progress; Francis; Horace. . Suhscriotians will be received for the follow ing periodical work*Le Belle Assemble*; MmiIIii) Review; Ackerman's Kepontor); Ec lectic Review; JiObthJ^ Mago4 0e; Voyages sad Trsvci% «tpJ4 Notice. , VT1NB months sflcr the date of this notice. County,forpermianon to sell ihe rest eitatc nf Leily Garter, dreoased. for the beneflt of th* heirs end «ieditor, uftheanid decesanl. LIGHT TOWNSEND, Adm’or. nuff 15, U. (£p An Emotion For a Jus. tic* or the Pr-tee for Chathem ootinty, captain J B. Mills Dutriet, wlllflie held at the Imnie of Hobci-uioy, in flavennah, on Wednesday tho SUi day of October ensuing, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the rraiqnstlon ol William A, Moore, Eaq. ALEX. HUNTER, j r V ISAIAII IMVENt’DHT, j TROMAS CLARK, 1 a lap 34 / Marshal’s Ofilce, Georgia, , JIAVANNAII, 33d Sept. 1823. IIE Marshall for the District of Geoi-xia, re quests Individuals who have aervrd a» jornra or appraisers, uho have noMu an piii.l, will he pleneed fo call on him for payment; and those who have demartda against h in officially, sept 24 e * '* , • >4 \ T Congiessional and Legislative Election. A N flection will be held et the court house in Buvannuh, in and for the county of Chat- ham, on Monday the seventh day of October en- suihg, for sever* Members to represent the stato o* Georgia itUhw Eighteenth Congress of tho United 8tutei,and for a Senator and ihree Re- preacnutlvea to represent said county in 111* next Li-Rialatute of thla atalr, of winch the elec, tor, will lake notloe. The Sheriff or his Depu ty will attend the same to keep and preserve flood order. Time for recelviitw votes from 7 o’clock in the morning till 6 o’clock in the sf. temoon. JOHN** WILLI AMBON, i iooe GEO. L COI’K. j icc e EDWARD HARDEN, flicee . I l|. FOR SALE, 7 3'D® IIIIDS prime N. Orleans Sugar joo ut ,m, f ™WrtpM* Bye Wfci.key 20 bbla Havana Cuffce 80 puncheona Old, N. O. Rom, 4th proof 130 kega White Lead r 50 kefla asserted Cut Nhill 1JJ bbla of Flour 40 bbla LinareAOH 50 boxes Mo sc if I Raieine 30 bbls Loaf Sugar 300 boxea Yelluw Soap 10 do Spermaceti Candles 50 do Cordial 10 pieces India Floor Malting 6 casks English assorted Cot Glial 1 case of Men’* Straw Hats 10 hales ot Yellow Nankeaoa, and an Invoice Furniture --luo— DRAFTS ON PHILADELPHIA. Sept 21 r. PERRY tt WBlftHT. ■hr * 4. Notice. P ROPOSALS will be received until the lit day of October next, is supply Ihe Steam Boat Company with WOOD on tbc Sav.iinab river, for one veer Applications for eontracu must specify the quality and price, and oun* the landing where to be delivered Letters, pmt paid, sddresied fo Carlo* Tracy. Treasurer, Augusta, nr to the President at S*. rannab, vill b* prororuly Handed to, S.C. OUNKm(i,Pre*’i. luff