Newspaper Page Text
■ New York, May 20.
i Arrival of the Caledoma.
THIRTEEN DAYS LATER FROM ENGLAND.
The British Steamer Caledonia, Capt. McKeller,
arrived at Boston yesterday tuorniug, at 6 o’clock,
f-tnn Liverpool, whence she sailed on the 4th instant,
hiving made her passage in less than 15 days. She
was 44|.hours on her passage front Halifax, where she
left 35 passengers; to Boston, she took 48.
Of tite President steamship nothing had been beard.
It Was pretty generally believed that she had foundered
in the heavy gale that overtook her soon after her leav
ing New Y ork, or that she had been crushed by the ice on
the Banks of Newfoundland. Still it was thought by
no means impossible (bat some of the crew and passen
gers had escaped in the boats, been picked up by
some vessel, and carried to a distant port.
The British ministry were defeated on the 27th ult.
on the Irish Voters Bill, by a vote of 300 to 189.
Majority against ministers 21.
Great excitement was caused by a notice from Lord
John Russell, that about Whitsuntide he should move
a committee for the revision of the Corn Laws. The
announcement was followed by repeated bursts of ex
ultation on one side and indignation on the other.
ellor of t Ire Exchequer had opened what
is commonly called The Budget. He began by ad
mitting that there had been a considerable deficiency
in the income of the last year as compared with the
expenditure. The question would naturally be asked,
whence this deficiency had arisen. The answer was,
Iron a felling off in the main sources of revenue—par
ticularly on currants, molasses, spirits, sugar, tea,
wine and sheep’s wool. There had been some in
crease on butter, cheese, coffee, olive oil, pepper, raw
silk, cotton wool, and one or two other articles. The
diminution on tea, sugar molasses and spirits had
aritti, not from disinclination to consume those arti
cles, M»l from the increase of their price. There had
been* considerable diminution of the Excise duty on
spirit! iu Ireland, but this he mentioned with sincere
pleasure, because it arose from the improvement oi
the people ia point of temperance.
The China difficulties have not been settled quite
so satisfactorily as was reported at the last steam
J acket arrival. On a question being asked Viscount
lelbouroe in the House of Lords, ou the 29th ultimo,
as to whether auy information of any agreement or
settlement with the Chinese had been received by the
Government, he replied iu the negative.
In reply to a deputation of merchants, who eotn-
ilalngd of the recent arrangement, Lord Palmerston
"said, that as yet he was only acquainted with the only
principles agreed to between the Plenipotentiaries—
uautely, that the Emperor was to cede to the British
crown, a territorial possession in China, that an in
demnity was to be paid to the British Government;
and that the official intercourse between the two coun
tries was, for (lie future to be conducted on terms of
perfect equality'. As yet he knew nodiing beyond the
admission of these important principles; and as it was
expressly stated that the details were to be the subject
of further negotiations, it necessarily followed that it
was impossible for his lordship to come to any'con
clusive opinion as to the acts of the British plenipo
tentiary until iu full possession of the details of the
a few moments. Yes; died of hunger in what has been
justly called the granary of the world. The .air for
miles was pt*5»one<l with tile effluvia emitted from the
putrifying bodies of the dead. The livers were chok
ed with the corpses thrown into their channels. Moth
ers cast their little ones beneath the rolling waves, be
cause they would not see them draw their last gasp,
and feel them stiffen in their arms. Jackalls and vul
tures approached and lattened upon the bodies of
men, women and children, before life was extinct.
.Madness disease and despair stalked abroad, and no
human power present to arrest tbeir progress. And
this occurred in British India, in the reign of Vic
toria the first. Nor was the event ex'raordinary or
unforeseen. Far from it. 1835 witnessed a famine in
the Northern province. 1833 beheld one in the Eas
tern. 1822 saw one in the Deccan. They have coir
tinned to increase iu frequency and extent under our
sway, for more than half a century.’ Under the ad
ministration of Lord Clive, a famine in the. Bengal
province swept off three millions; and at that time the
British speculators had their granaries filled to reple
tion with corn. Horrid monopoly of the necessaries
of life! Thee millions died, while there was food
enough, and to spare, locked up in the storehouse to
gether. To add to the horror with which he had
been called upon to regard the last dreadful famine,
(that of the last year,) we are made acquainted by
the returns of tiie custom house, with the fact, that as
much grain was exported from the lower parts of Ben
gal, as would have fed the half million who perished,
for a whole year. Yet this awful oppression and these
desolating famines must go on, that England may ex
tort a hundred millions of dollars every year, from
her hundred millions of Hindoos; and poppies must
grow instead of wheat, that, at her cannon’s mouth,
she may force her opium upon the three hundred mil
lions of the Chinese, while some one solitary marsh-
man, perhaps, is translating the Bible of the Christ
ians, to bring these countless millions to accept the
religion of a nation that stands ready at this moment
to destroy one half of them by war, that it may de
stroy the other half by poison.”
Splendid Eruption of a Volcano.—We are
indebted, says the Newark Daily Advertiser, to an
officer of the Explo ing Expedition, for files of the
Polynesian, a useful little paper published at, the
Sandwich Islands, and transfer the following extract
from a full account of the last remarkable volcanic
eruption, w hich was briefly referred to by our corres
pondent in a late, letter, as having been witnessed by
the officers of tiie squadron:
Several day before the eruption, smoke teas seen by
the natives risiug from the direction where the lava
afterwards burst out, hut it was attributed to brush on
fire. At two o’clock on Sunday, the last day of May,
a bright light.was seen from Hilo towards the south,
which spread with great rapidity', and increased to
such an intensity that it was immediately attributed to
a volcanic eruption. This the report of the natives
soon confirmed. It was judged to be thirty miles dis
tant, and at night such was tiie brilliancy of the light,
that the finest print could be easily read at that dis
tance. This noon-tide brightness, converting night
inio day continued far two weeks, and is represented
by eye-witnesses to have been a spectacle ofunsurpas-
further negot iations so alluded to. ,
The Dublin Monitor states that the accounts from I * cd subl J m 'V' II " as 1,ke tl,e S lare of a firmament on
nil parts of Ireland, as to the stale of the registries j f,re ’ a " d w . as seen for upwards of a hundred miles at
rthit
are most deplorable. The Liberals are beaten in
someoftlieir strongest holds, and the Tories have tri
umphed by vast majorities. Louth is all but lost: of
all the counties in Irelaud it was considered the most
. With few' exceptions, the tenants of the nu-
merons large Whig proprietors of Louth are unregis
tered, and this (says the Monitor) is the fruit of the
Repeal nonsense—of neglecting the registries to
speecbiiy at meetings of the Registry Association of
Ireland.”
The Steamship President, cost £80,000, and was
insured on leaving Liverpool, for $60,000.
— A nephew of the veritable Alexander Selkirk, the
original of the celebrated Robinson Crusoe, is living
at Cannon Mills, near Edinburg, in rather indigent
circumstances.
Within the last three or four days an extraordina
ry change has occurred iu the state of our money mar
ket. Where it was difficult to place money at any
reasonable rats of interest, say at 2h to 3j percent!;
his now so scarce that people are scrambling n> ob-
‘ i it on terms much higher than before.—The cause
i sudden scarcity is not quite apparent, as no
■nerstioa has occurred in commercial affairs which
CofcUi feaye produced the change; probably it has or-
iginhted ia some financial operation between the Gov
ernment add the bank, or in repayments to the bank
on account of deficiency bills. We hear of 5 per cent
interest being^ paid for short loans on Exchequer hills
Lnd.
( _ Father Mathew’s proselytes in Ulster hare suffered
tiro aggravated attacks. A Temperance uieeting,
fit Newton Hamilton, o'u the I2tb was attacked by a
gang of persons, who fired random shots in the streets,
broke windows, and endeavored to provoke a breach
of the peace. The Police were summoned, and they
remained oft guard a great part of the night. At
Lurgan, a large meeting in the Diaper Hall was at
tacked on the 13tir,' says the Belfast Vindicator, by
“a pack of banded bloodhounds, whose evident pur
pose was the destruction of some or all cf the inmates.
Their Inst for blood was not, however, to be grati
fied.” The Magistrates eluded the search for them;
bat the “calm dignity” of the quiescent Teetotallers
of police repelled the intruders; not,
windows of the hall were smash-
tided, anil one shot was fired. Seven
i committed for trial.
however,
*d, a girl was '
M the rioters <
India.—British TnuRjr-- Tlle Rev - J - P' er *
pout gives toe following desenpoon of the horrid tyr
anny of the British-Government in this unhappy re-
gioo;
“The sanguinary wars by which Great Britain has
ealgngateff fiw hundred millions of India, and the
stern despotism with which she rules and starves them,
fot her merchant princes may roll in splendor and lap
fifenfeelfes in voluptuousness, have a voice whi< h the
Methickness of the globe cannot keep out of our
_ ' »A more beautiful country,’ says a brother
nfergymau, recently of this city, ‘than that from Ctid-
dalone to Tanjore (in Madras) cannot possildy be
'Imagined. The dense population and rich soil give
their energies to each other, and produce a scene of
surpassing loveliness. But the taxes and other cau
ses keep down the laborers to a state below that of
oar Southern slaves.’ ‘Turn your eyes backwards,’
says a speaker of their own, no longer ago than last
September, ‘turn your eyes backward upon the scenes
of last year. Go with me intothe northwest provinces
of the Bengal presidency, and 1 will show you the
bleaching skeletons of five hundred thousand human
beings; who perished of hunger in the short space of
It also rose and spread itself above the lofty
mountain peaks, so as to be distinctly visible on the
leeward side of the island, where the wind drove the
smoke in dense and massy clouds.
The lava continued flowing towards the sea, tvhicli
it reached on Thursday, four days from its first egress.
At times it would rush forward with a velocity of four
or five miles per hour, but for a short distance only,
then become very sluggish, and move heavily and
slowly on. Its general movement was in immense
semi-circular masses, owing to its great consistency.
These would roll on, gradually' accumulating, until
the mass had become too heavy to hold itself together,
while the exterior was partially cooled and solidified;
then bursting, the liquid interior flowing out, would
join a new stream, and thus aid in forming another.
By these accelerated progressive movements, the
wave-like ridges were formed, which are every where
observable on the older currents. At times, it forced
its way under the circumjacent soil, presenting the sin
gular appearance of earth, rocks and trees in tumid,i,
like the swell of the ocean. Mr. C. was standing
near the stream and watching its progress, when the
land beneath him beg in to rise, and in a few minutes
he was ten feet above his companions, who were but
a short distance from him.—lie had barely lime to
leave this dangerous situation, when the earth opened,
and lava gushed out. The color of the whole stream
was of the deepest crimson. On the windward side
its heat was not so powerful, but that persons could
approach arid plunge sticks into the firery mass and
draw forth specimens. So great was its viscidity
that large forks were seen floating down the current,
like cork upon water, in one night the stream
spread from a few rods to half a mile in w idth.
The spectacle, when this burning mass reached the
sea, must have been awful and sublime in the highest
degree. The conflict between the two antagonist
powers, fire and water, was on a scale which the eye
of man but seldom witnesses. The heavens were lit
up in one intense blaze, while streams of fire like
lightning glanced About iu every direction. Ashes
and sand were thrown to a great height into the air,
and descended for miles distant in showers of fiery
spray. Volumes of smoke and stream rolled heavily
op, rendering the lurid glare still more powerful,
while the heavy detonations and loud reports of ex
ploding gases, and the roar of the conflicting ele
ments, were distinctly heard twenty-five miles off, like
discharges of artillery.
With such rapidity and to such a degree was the
Posthumous Respect for the Great.—There
is scarcely any delusion which has a better claim to
be indulgently treated than that, under the influence
of which a man ascribes every moral excellence to
those who have left imperishable monuments of their
genius. The causes of this error,lie deep in the in
most recesses of human nature.' We are all inclined
to judge of others as we find them. Our estimate of
a character alway s depends much on the manner in
which that character afiects our own interests and
passions. We find it difficult to think well of those
by whom we are thwarted or depressed; arid we are
ready to admit every excuse for the vices of those who
are useful or agreeable to us. This is we believe, one
of those illusions to which the whole human race is
sul tject and which experience and reflection can only
partially remove. It is, in the phraseology of Ba
con, oue of the idola. trilms. Hence it is, 'that the mo
ral character of a man eminent in letters, or in the
fine arts, is treated,—often by contemporaries,—al
most always by posterity',—with extraordinary ten
derness. The world derives pleasure and advantage
from the performances of such a man. The number
of those who suffer by his personal vices is small, even
in his own time, w'hen compared with the number of
those to whom bis talents are a source of gratification.
In a few years, all those who be has njured disap
pear. But his works remain, and are a source of de
light to millions.—The genius of Sallust is still with
us. But the Numidians whom he plundered, and the
unfortunate husbands who caught him in tbeir houses
at unseasonable hours, are forgotten. We suffer our
selves to be delighted by the keenness of Clarendon’s
observation, and by the sober majesty of his style, till
we forget the oppressor and bigot, in the historian.
Falstaff and Tom Jones have survived the game-
keepers whom Shakespeare cudgelled, and the laud-
ladies whom Fielding bilked. A great writer is the
friend and benefactor of his readers; and they cannot
but judge of him under the deluding influence of
friendship and gratitude. We all knuw how unwil
ling we are to admit the truth of any disgraceful sto
ry about a person whose society we like, and from
whom we have rtceived favors, bow long we struggle
against evidence, how fondly, when the facts cannot
be disputed, we cling to the hope that there be some
explanation or some extenuating circumstances with
which we are unacquainted. Just such is the feel
ing which a man of liberal education naturally enter
tains towards the great minds of former ages. The
debt which he owes to them is incalculable. They
have guided them to truth. They have filled his
mind with noble arid graceful images. They have
stood by him in all vicissitudes,—comforters in sorrow,
nurses in sickness, companions in solitude. These
friendships are exposed to no danger from the occur
rences by which other attachments are weakened or
dissolved. Time glides by; fortune is inconstant;
tempers are soured; bonds which’ seemed indissoluble
are daily sundered by interest, by emulation, or bv
caprice. But no such course can affect the silent con
verse which we hold with the highest of human intel
lects. That placid intercourse is disturbed by no
jealousies or resentments. These are the old friends
who are never seen with new faces, who are the same
in wealth and iu poverty', in glury and iu obscurity.
With the dead there is no rivalry. Iu the dead there
is no change. Plato is never sullen.—Cervan.es
is uever petulant. Demosthenes never comes unsea
sonably. Dante never stays too lung. No differ
ence of political opinion can alienate Cicero. No
heresy can excite the horror of Bbssnet.—Macauley's
Miscellany. *
Report of the Branch Bank of|
Tax Receiver*
the State of Georgia.
BRANCH BANK STATE GA. \
Katomtos, Mat 27, 1841. (
To His Excellency Charles J. McDonald, Governor, t(e.
Sir—Herewith, I send you a statement, .hewing the con*
diiieu of. this Branch, on Muuday nioruiug die 5th of April,
1841. I am, very respectfully, * our ob't. serv’t.
D. R. ADAMS, Cashier.
A statement shewing the condition of the Branch Bank of the
State of Georgia, at Eatonton, on the 5th Ayrit, 184J.
RESOURCES.
Notes discounted running to main-
| T WILL attend at the Court House ia the Gdy of HilM|tdBr,a|,
I X the 2Jd, iMtli arid iitli days of J une in«t-, to receive mean od.sqan* \
1 hie property for the county of Beldwra-^ef rrhiuhtaU ‘
ed are desired to take notice, as t intend to close ajr Beaks sa As lass
mentioned dev. JEHU KDtaC, ft. T.
June 4, 1841. -
Extensive Forgeries.—Discovery was made
yesterday of one of the largest forgeries ever perpe
trated in this city. The particulars of the affair, as
far as wc have been able to gather them, arc, that on
Thursday the 15th instant, a person calling himself
Nathaniel Britton, went to the Bank of America
with the cut half of a certificate of depnsite. stating
that twenty-three thousand Mexican dollars had been
placed to the credit of the hearer in the Commercial
Bank of New Orleans, and requested of Mr. Thomp
son, the cashier, the other half of the certificate.
With this request Mr. Thompson complied, having
received ten days before a letter purporting to come
from George O. Hall, the cashier at New Orleans,
enclosing the half of a certificate which he was re
quested to give to Mr. Britton when he should call
for it. The two halves were compared and found to
correspond. Mr. Britton then inquired where he
could get such a draft cashed, and Mr. Thompson ac
companied .him to the offices of different money bro
kers, who declined inkitm the draft, but finally Mr.
Jacob Little agreed to purchase it at a small discount.
A clie> k on the Union Bank was given for it, and
paid in one thousand dollar hills. The draft being
sent to the south, Mr. Little wa» informed ia reply that
all the papers were forgeries.
It appears that this was only one of a series of frauds
that litis fellow has committed. At Louisville he re
ceived fifteen thousand dollars from the Bank of Ken
tucky, by similar means; at Cincinnati he received
thirteen thousand dollars from the Lafayette Bank ;
and at Philadelphia lie sold a draft for fifteen thousand
dollars, which being suspected, was soon after relum
ed. At Louisville he took the name of Dawson, and
at Cincinnati that of Parker. He is an Englishman,
apparently about thirty-five years of age, light hair,
with a large forehead, a defective front tooth, an in
tense expression of countenance, and a slight stoop
in the shoulder. Mr. Little has offered five thousand
dollars, and the banks other amounts, for his appre
hension.
Do ttansfened from agency at
Greensboro,
Salaries paid,
incidental expenses paid,
Hauking house and lot.
Due l>y banks, See.
Bills other banks on baud.
Specie in vault.
$135,870 SO
3,877 00
3 .117 72
15,934 00
27,208 II
139,747 SO
1.500 00
167 61
2.500 00
46,259 83
190,174 97
LIABILITIES.
For capital stock, 100.000 00
Do hills in circulation, 48.517 00
T O Wolfe, Bishop St Co. L. M. Wiley, Rank fcCos Ohm
Boag it Co. tValdron, Thomas * Co. A.Q. TllMiM
iliulomew, Hulsey, Liter A Co. Henry W-Coe
Joseph Van Altai, Ezekiel B. Stoddard, Hatch,
Lay less, fbr the uaevf Fey Ion Reynold*, Wrtlinn
Union Bank of Flurido,iutd the Book of He 1
TAKE NOTICE, that whereas at a Marti
Georgia, on the first Tuesday, in Mny met. cat tab
abLampkfn, levied on by virtue uf fourteen £ Css,
circuit court of lire Uuited Stales, fur tlae Did
of Wolfit, Bishop ,% Co. aud other plainufia,' _ r>
hold the proceed* of stale, eubjert to the ardor ft the court, was swvod
by the Attorney of the Bank of Hawkiusviuo—4be Upton Rank of Ftor-
■da, Peyton Reynolds end Willis iu Rankin, .And yili^jhtht snla—
uf mid Court, it ■» necessary that the pIsiniMs Is nrrnpgw sftanl*
eotos forward, and show to I lid Court, that. sold j 11 Jgimodffj ftp Ortaaftp.
subsisting sod unsatisfied. Therefore tiie names MlSMsBsd-wsRaafca
du-notice. , WM. J. DaVTA. Msrahtl.
May 2d. 1841. I» h> '
United State* Marshal Sale.
postponed Sale.
\VILL be sold befory the pourtHou*edocw.f*
* ville, on the first Tuesday in July uext, the I
Due to other hanks.
Do Branches State Bauk,
Do Bauk Slate Georgia,
2,493 30
5.372 46
2.008 84
148,517 00
Account with Bank State Georgia, for
notes transferred from Greensboro,
Due individuals for deposites,.
Gross profits for the last siz months,
9,874 60
3,877 00
22,004 39
5,901 98
190,174 97
REVIEW. , . ,
Notes aud hills runuing to maturity, 133. J04 00
~ ’ 2 766 50
0,000 00
135;870 50
none.
noue.
9135,870 50
fJtries in suit,
Motes under protest and not in suit,
Of the above amount considered
doubtful.
Do do do do bad.
Do do do do good,
GEORGIA, Putnam County.—'Personally came before
me, Jeremiah (/lark. President, and David il. Adams, Cash
ier of the branch of the Bauk of the State of Georgia, at
Eatonton, who, on being sworn, 9ay that the above statement
of the condition of said brauch, ou Alouday the 5th day of
April, 1831, is correct, to the best of tbeir knowledge and
belief. JEREMIAH CLARK, President.
D. R. ADAMS, Cashier.
Iu the presence of James Nicholson, j. i. c.
Office of the W. 4M. Rail Road,
April 15th, 1811.
To hi* Excellency Charles J. McDonald:
Sir,—By reference to the accompanying document, the report of
Major William*, Chief Engineer, it will be seen, that the aggregate ex
penditure incurred for materials furnished aud work done on the Wes
tern & Atlantic Railroad, during the quarter ending.on the first week
of this mouth, aiuouuts to 4U) sixty-uue thousand and eigh
teen dollars, forty-six cents. This sum covers all dues .to contractors
of every description, including timbers for superstructure, as well as
materials, wooden tmil uietaiic, for bridge building and uli other purpo
ses. Reserving, according to the terms of every contract, which , tire
Commissioners have made since they have had charge of ibis public
work, twenty-five per cent, of the stipulated price of services rendered,
the actual disbursement* for the quarter may be stated at ($53£10 931
fifty* three thousand two hundred uud ten dollars mud ninety-three cents.
The smullness of this expenditure as compared to averages fur a. like
period of time in the years 1838,1839 fit 1840, is to be accounted for hr
the facts, that the road formation has progressed towards completion
thut the bridge architectureon the N. W. division of {he road has been
by order of the board, partially.suspeude I, aud that most con true Ion
having hud a prolongation of the term within which meir engagements
were to have been fulfilled, are operating with a diminished force. The
reasons for this indulgence were given iumy last report and need not
now be repeated. , .. i. . .
lu the month of February last, information having been received,
that one or more pf the Brunch Railroads, which are to connect the
Western Atlantic .Railroad with t lew. markets of Macon, Savannah
and Augusta, were likely to be urged forward, the Board of Commis
sioners determined to take immediate step?, to complete thesuperstruc-
tore on at least fifty miles ot iuJ State’s work. After due publication
of notice,adequate supplies of timber lof jb* purpose were contracted
for on favorable terms; ar.d it is nol doubledthat jhe whole will fcn de
livered in the course of the coming summer.
The experience of every country where railroads have been construe
d, has shewn that tiuil»eis used as mud-sills and cross-ties, placed
horizontally and in contact with the earth, ora liable lo speed v decay—
tendency that cannot fail, in the luiitudv of Georgia, to increase great
ly the exjiense of repairs. To the end, of dimi* ishing that expense, the
Commissioners could not but see the utility of employing such means
of preserving timber as chemistry and the reports of practical men had
recommended to public confidence. Among these, the efficacy of chlo
ride of mercury, the corrosive sublimate ol commerce, seems now to
be weil established—and a combination of the sulphates of iron and of
copper, is next.in repute. Kyan, of England, is the discoverer of the
former, and Dr. Earle, of Philadelphia, the laiter; both of wh«»m have
received letters puteut from their respective, governments, anti Kvan, it
is understood, has secured his rights, of discovery, on both -sides of-the
Atlantic. Whatever may he the difference in the intrinsic valne of
these two pre-ervniiv.e processes, time, and trial can only determine—
Kvan's has stood tiie le-t of fuugus pits and some fifteen years expo
sure to common atmospheric agents, eve* changing temperature, mois
ture aud dryness. Earl’s sulphates have been ou trial about two years
in some timber pavements laid on two of the principal streets of Phila
delphia and by comparison with unprejuucd blocks laid dow n at the
same rime and place, give good uidicatibus of anticipated durability.
The slightest examination of the subject will render palpable, the
economy of using these preservative processes on railroad timber. Its
cost, per mile, varies from two to three thousand dollars, according to
the plan of superstructure which the Chief Engineer may adopt, and
the prices at which the timber can be had. Kymi's pritcess is estimated
at from 30 to 50 percent, ou the prime cost of «ke limber preserved by
it—and Earle’s at not exceeding lOorlSper cent. Should they then
give hut three-fold durability to timber, (audit maybe five or te'n-lold)
thr; saving or nett gain to the road or its proprietor, must, in a protract
ed term of years, l»e immense.
Since my last quarterly report, nothing has occurred to obstruct se
riously the progress of this public work. The inability of iho Com
missioners to make payment in any thing heller than Slate Bonds, has
had the unavoidable effect of erdiaucitig, to some extent, the current ex-
pe no it ure, and doubtless occasions delay in finishing the tunnel and
some other very heavy parts of the road.
Respectfully submitted,
J. CRAWFORD, Pres't of the Board.
One house and lot, No. ,13* in tin town qf Harriett** CJm ca«rt|.*
containing one half of ail acre at land, muse or .lose, wstfi ■ iM|
improvement df .a new framed dwelling, and Othinr. «•( WA *4*
joining Mr.. Rinck on the east, and. sit anted mwUi-nMt
house square—levied ou us the property of Janarst 0*. WmH%
ceasftd, aud H. K. Foote, Administrator of spaI i{|
isfy a fi fa issued from the District Csurf of the Up
die District of Georgia, in. fisvor of ikc^aiKd fig T
ica, vs Hccekiaii ft. Foote, sdmiaisfntfaa .«£ JftfppsJL
deceased—also lot number three hundred «d tfajriy 1
teenih district and third section c it' Fauldioc, natsisw, «srl
ssil si at v acres more chjess; property aoiated.aatjw saii “
uinistrstor. ' . JOUJt A.' BitEEDCOVE, 4>. 1
June 4, 1841.; -
ADMINISTRATOR’S SALE. .
first Tues&ijr m Aufinot next, kofara ike Cowl Hooss Aeori |M
coupty, four-fifths of three knwlrej) voi Uuny ocm»(H «MS«f
said counts, siuabsraot known, bit kaotruss the phi, oft Wife*
win Willis sow lives, sold as tbs pmpsrta of DniMaOHLa
Sold for the benefit of thj heirs of ssqi deces—d. TTel
June i, mV
NOTICE. , m ...
A LL persona indebted to the estpte oi Daaid Sirapoo* dereaerd,«%
hereby required to make payment, nod those having dainoaiM
I aslsle,ore requested to iuesenrthear interne ef thole*,
WILLIAM W. “
Pulaski county, June 4,18411.
UAVO^rfe^fc
TOWNS
rug
SMITH; 1 .
H AVE connected thenueirea ia the practice of the Lw
will attend the Superior. Courts for the vinnlKOof TalL __
ris, Muscogee, .Mmmmi and Site, art,in the fhatlaboorbee I'iaslh**
the Superior CoiajR lor the counties of Randolph. $qtly, .DccqUeiM*-
ker, Runner, Dooly and Mncoo, in the South-Western Circuit.. :*■*
office borer the store of Denars. Slnllinfs k Famous, T situ Ilea, liu.
where one of the undersigned can stall linesbe found. •. *>< j V: £
geo, w: wm
Cj LEVI ■: SMITH. .
May 81,1841. it-*.
A PROCLAMATION;
GEORGIA:
By CHARLES J. McDONALD, Goucrmr
of saiti State. . „ .
W HEREAS, it appears from an inquisition held oo the i
in the countv ul WHkmeun, in this. State, that .a jhr.faj
William Keeton wae mortally wounded by, SAMUEL.M. P|1
of which.wound lie bos since died ; and that the said Samuel
man hasUed from notice: ... t . t ,. Tl
I have thcrefore iliougjit properlo4>suetkie myj' ’’
oQeriug a reward of One Hundred aodfi/tf Dutton, tonus I
persons* who may apprehend, aaddslivest the said Sauiaal ML J
the.sheriiT or jailor ol Milkiuenit county. .And l do ■ ]HfM*
aud require ill officers,civil snd military within tbb£l»to,ie l.
in endeavoring la apprehend the said Samuel Xd^HOMuf lo ha J
within the some, so that that he lusy undergo s trial tor tbs < '
which be stands charged. ' ■ .■ . .. , .
Given underlay band, and ihegreut Seal of the Slate,, at dm F*t
io Milledgevillc, Ibis the 12th of Mar, 1841, and of Isiliirii t
dependence, the sixtv-Slih. , > v, -t*\'li»
Jl- CHARLES J. HcDONALBL
By. the Governor: .....
Wit. A. Tukille,SecretatyofState- .
DlseBirrios^-Tbe said Beinnel JL.Hrotn
high,slender built, dark complexion;'JhM. I
thirty years of age, quick spoken,
twemydiTe'orthirtv pounds. k. ,
May 21,1841. 17—31
Fifty Mtolmrs MSeietnrdl.
E SCAPED from the Penitentiary onlhe 7rb inti a rrnij.f nsmstl
HUGH CARLIN, who.says' be ip a native uX-Egym., Jfio. js
about Soyeurg old, 5 feet, 4 j inches hath, light Con*plosion, .Irghlatamsf
dy hair and light eyes. Ho wore off on old black hat, sMfithlHff a4
white cotton warp and derk trollcn filling, cotton olnnbarf , shirq a*
com or vest, suspenders of broad ret) and yellow couch la«r, snde hoig
round hir body. He sms sent from Chatham county, for, Jtaarlangbwet
and b said u> hsrebren a Ik* years since in tliirmrlrtr ,f Putts 8a
Seymours, of Macon, as aCIcck Pedler. Fifty Dollars will, kawMir j
libapprehensiun sod deliver* - at the .Penitentiary or if lodcwd.m a*ff
Jail, SO that I get him. C. H. NELSON Principal Keeper.
May 21,1841. . . V-lg.
TRE.tSURl DEPARTMENT.
.llilletlgcvillc. Sd June, 1841.
To the Tax Collectors of the State of
Georgia.
I DEEM it my duty to lay before you* the third section of “an set to
compel the several Banka of this State !o redeem their liabilities in
specie, and to provide for the forfeiture of the charter or charters of
such as may refuse.” The sectiimreads as follows:
“ Six. 3. And he it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That
the bills of such defaulting Bunk or Banks shall nor be received in
payment of auy public due or dues into the Treasury 4»f this State, or
Central Bank, except those of the Central Bank, of Georgia, which
payment of Taxes and other dues payable
Black Spot on the Sun.—A black spot upon
ihe suit’s disk, larger than a star of the first magni
tude, is plainly visible to the naked eye, by looking
water healed, that the following day (Juue 5th) the j through a pitce of smoked glass. It is upon the wes-
fish floated when dead, as far as Keati, fifteen miles teru or northwestern side, about one quarter of the
distant, where the water was hot to the touch.
How to Preserve Health.—It is stated in a
foreign paper that M. Fourcault, a French Physician,
has recently made some important discoveries and ex
periments, which go to show that an important means
of preserving or restoring health is, a due attention
to the access of air to every part of the external sur
face of the body. He succeeded in producing at plea
sure, in animals, before healthy, suppression of per
spiration, conjestioiis of the blood, the derangement
of the internal organs, affections of the heart, and the
foundation of aggregation of matter in the lungs, an
alogous to the tubercles in pulmouory consumption,
and even death itself as the con'equence. |
The means by which he arrived at these results was! 1 HE SEASON,
the simple prevention of the access of air to the skin, j At Quebec.—The Quebec Gaietle of the 14th
which by checking the functions of perspiration, caus-! inst. says, “There are yet large quantities of the
ed the matters usually carried off through their agen-| winter’s snow in the fields along the fences and in
cy, to bfc thrown back upon the internal organs.—j the woods, but the ground that is uncovered, is fit
Boston Journal. for sowing.”—.Veto YorJ: Evening Post, May 21.
distance from the centre to the periphery, and must be
several thousand miles in diameter.—It is to be hop
ed that some of our astronomers will watch its course
and progress, and thereby learn thepetiod of the sun’s
revolution on its axis, and the inclination ofits axis to
the plain of the earth’s orbit. That this phenomenon
may have an influence upon the temperature of the at
mosphere is not improbable, when we compare the
season thus far with the cold summer <>f I SI 6, when a
similar phenomenon was observed. The abstraction
of a column of rays* of a few thousand miles in diame
ter for the space of six or eight months only, will cer-
L ‘ tainly be no mean fraction to our ordinary supply—,
'' Express.
slmll be receivable only
to the State, or Central Rank.
By the provisions of this act, the bills of no Bfeuk or Bank*, nee re
ccivable iu payment of Taxes to the .State, but such as redeem tlieir
liabilities “ promptly,” in gold aud silver, and therefore 1 call your at
tention to the subject in due time, that vou mav be prepared to act ad
visedly, in performing your duly as Collectors. .
The bills which are now receivable at the Treasury, are those of
The Central Bank.
The Baiik of Aususta.
Mechanic’s Bank of Augusta.
Augusta Insurance and Banking Company.
Bank of the State of Georgia, and all its branches, except the Branch
at Macon.
Planters’ Bank at Savannuh.
Marine & Fire Insurance Bank at Savannah.
Central Rail Road fit Banking Companj*.
Branch of the Georgia Kail Road fic. Banking Company at Augusta.
Comuieicial Bauk of Macon..
Ocmulgce Bank at Macon.
Insurance Bank of Columbus at Macon.
Bank of Milledgeviile.
Bank of St. Mary’s.
Bank of Brunswick.
Bank of Ruckersvilie. ,
Western Bank of Georgia. j
All which,you are authorized to receive for Taxes, so long as they
continue to conform to the obligations of said act, by a prompt redemp
tion of their bills in ^|iecie, and no longer; aud you arc further notified,
that the bills of no Bank or Banks which do not redeem their bills a*
aforesaid, will be received at this Department from the Collectors, in
payment of Taxes. ^ j
Should a a-ibseauent suspension take place with any of the Banks
above enumerateo, 1 shall take the earliest measure to apprise you of
the fact. 4>rehould any of those now euspended. subsequently resume,
it will also be promptly made known, with instructions to receive their
bills.
This Department expects every Collector, as well for hi* own safety,
■s for the public interest, to conform strictly, to the requirements of the
law above refered to.
T. HAYNES, Tr,
GTr* The Federal Union, Southern Recorder, Georgia Journal, West
ern Georgian, Ca«eville Pioneer, Southern Banner, Transcript, Geor
gia Jeffersonian, Columbus Times, Georgia Argus, Fayetteville Adver
tiser, Mucnn Telegraph, Georgia Messenger, South Western Georgian,
Georgia Constitutionalist, and Savannah Georgiun, will give the above
two insertions.
DOOLY superior cotJlnT;
MARCH ADJOURNED TERM, 1S4(.
W E the Grand Jurors sworn, ehpseu aurl aplectqfi U r
the present term uf ibis Court, beg leave to —Mr, -
the fol'owiuj; presentment*.: , * . , v
lit ihu, exercise of the ackuewlidged tight of.ljq ,citqtpq
under .our system of government, aud iu quitfprqiiljf —f»h
long established usage, wc, a* a b.ody, take licence,topajwaw|
our opinions on some of the subjects of ptiblie rnuiam
which engage the feelings and affect the iiitctests jjqt mlj of
the people whom we mote iimjiediaiely, repreqent, au.tbff
Grand Jurors of Dooly county, hut of.the .Whole, .people uf
Georgia. It is au axiom which mine wilt undertake to fqp-*
trover!, that it is the doty of those to whom puMic traqly arq
confided so to devise and administer jhe law« of. gwveaam^t
as ti> confer..tiie greatest good apuu the gieqteqg awtoher.'
with due respect lor the rights of the minority ;,aqid. Uie !
no;, escape the convictiou. lhai there has hequ error <'
iu the legislation of the country,, or fq thy •dmiamgyptl
existing laws which from the records of ogr ^syitq
from the advertisements of, the collecting «wnp .af t
country, we derive iucontcstible proofs of thq painfel fag
that a great majority of our citizens qre burdened w(i^2p.
tressiug embarrassments and thrcateiied iu.many instances
with inevitable ruin. We do uut believe it wise to teachVto
people lo rely upon the government for percuttjary >ij iylam a
in icdeeniiug them from the causequcuces of indisciami
folly, but wheu from extraordinary, uupropitious eircuni^ms-
ces, over w hich human foresight has no eontrowL snch to ribs
untowardoess of the seasons, all the efforts of i-dhstry hare
been rendered fruitless,' and the reasonable •xpdiiuuam at
the most prudeul thwartcd. we recogiiize jt as' on# of the first
duties of a State, to iuteiyose the. |Mvren inflilff I
her sovereignty nut! her tonified responsibility, to proseel her
citizens from the Couseqnences of misfortune, which io the
result of Providential diipyrisaimo—oetertsiaiug these views,
wc cannot do otherwise than repudiafo the theorizing at.
stractions of the Legislature at iu lest session, which were
set np as the grouud of refusal io tuwtias the hawar sw.
position of Governor McDnn.sfd for toe' relief jut the i
And we take I be occasion to say that we do net only decto
the reOommeodaUud of Goveruor McDonald evidence ot
cqintneudahle sympathy in - the distress ol a ProvUenliaUy
afflicted people—but we are constrained to award to him n
forecast with reference, to the soundness of fee
Banks of the State, and their inability to afford* c
medium to snhserve.the purposes of trade evincive'in
eminent degree of the w isdom of the Statesman,
i DAVID GRAHAM, Foremaa
Masrs Piplc n,
tf'm. Farrell,
Lewis Simmons,
Matt'ew Butler,
George Knowles,
Richard Bowen,
John Hammond,
JamrS Holland.
Benjamin Olliff,
John B. Crum pier,
William Register,'
Henry Goodman,
ytttkan Ymmgklstd.
John C. Royals.
. The undersigned, n part of the Grand Jury, beg lea—— p 1
dissent front and protest against that part of the ferrrninff'
presentments which embrace an approval of the ItliifNm
sage of Governor McDonald and a cenenre upon the pnhey
of the last Legislature with regard to that propaaWnnl'
Eliab Jones, Philemon Bohannan.
Redmond Brown, James H. Swaaringih,
Sion Godwin, Alien Water*.
We request the publication of thatpatr of afar psnoant-,
meuts which is of a public nature, in the Federal Uatcq ttov
Standard of Uniou.
Ordered, that fho foregoing preseolments he ^ahiiidiej
in accordance with their request,
March adjourned Term, 1841.
A true extract front the minutes. .. ,.. .
THOMAS H. KEY, Clerk**. €: